This study evaluated Children’s Friendship Training (CFT), a manualized parent-assisted intervention to improve social skills among second to fifth grade children with autism spectrum disorders. Comparison was made with a delayed treatment control group (DTC). Targeted skills included conversational skills, peer entry skills, developing friendship networks, good sportsmanship, good host behavior during play dates, and handling teasing. At post-testing, the CFT group was superior to the DTC group on parent measures of social skill and play date behavior, and child measures of popularity and loneliness, At 3-month follow-up, parent measures showed significant improvement from baseline. Post-hoc analysis indicated more than 87% of children receiving CFT showed reliable change on at least one measure at post-test and 66.7% after 3 months follow-up.
A Randomized Controlled Study of Parent-assisted Children’s Friendship Training with Children having Autism Spectrum Disorders
F. Frankel,R. Myatt,Catherine A. Sugar,Cynthia Whitham,Clarissa M. Gorospe,E. Laugeson
Published 2010 in Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2010
- Venue
Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
- Publication date
2010-01-08
- Fields of study
Medicine, Education, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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