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HOW THE WWC REVIEWS AND DESCRIBES EVIDENCE
The WWC conducted a systematic review of interventions designed to improve teacher practice and selected and prioritized studies
for review using the version 4.1 Systematic Review Protocol for Social, Emotional, and Behavioral Interventions. The WWC evaluated
the quality and results of the selected studies using the criteria outlined in the version 4.1 Procedures and Standards Handbooks and
the accompanying Study Review Protocol.
The WWC considers each study’s research design, whether findings were statistically significant and positive, and the number of studies
contributing to this report. The WWC synthesizes evidence across studies—using a weighted average—to determine the effectiveness
rating for each outcome domain. The WWC defines outcome domains in the Study Review Protocol to group related outcome measures.
The WWC considers the effectiveness rating, the sample size, and the number of educational sites (states, districts, local education
agencies, schools, postsecondary campuses) across studies to determine the evidence tier for each outcome domain. When the
effectiveness rating is uncertain, potentially negative, or negative effects, there is no evidence tier.
Moderate evidence TIER • Receives an effectiveness rating of potentially positive effects, and
of effectiveness 2 • Includes at least 350 students in at least two educational sites
MODERATE
Promising evidence TIER • Receives an effectiveness rating of potentially positive effects or positive effects
of effectiveness 3 • Includes fewer than 350 students or two educational sites
PROMISING
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Teachers can implement CW-FIT during whole-class instruction or while students are working independently or in small
groups. In all eight studies, CW-FIT was implemented with the whole class. The developer recommends that teachers
implement 30-to 60-minute CW-FIT sessions three to four times per week during periods when students typically
demonstrate disruptive behaviors. This frequency of sessions should be maintained over time, although teachers can
decrease their monitoring of target behaviors and provide fewer opportunities for rewards as student behavior improves.
In six studies, teachers implemented CW-FIT during varied class periods, and in two studies, teachers implemented CW-FIT
during the period where students tended to be most disruptive. Teachers implemented the intervention once per day in six
studies and three to five times a week in the other two studies. Table 2 summarizes the components and implementation of
CW-FIT in more detail, and the appendix provides additional information about study-specific implementation in the single-
case design studies.
WWC standards assess the quality of the research, not the quality of the implementation. Studies that meet WWC standards
vary in quality of implementation. However, a study must describe the relevant components of the program and how each
was implemented with adequate detail to be included in an intervention report.
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Component Description of the component How it was implemented
Additional Teachers can provide additional supports for students who are In two studies, after implementing initial CW-FIT sessions,
targeted having significant challenges demonstrating the target skills. teachers provided additional, targeted supports for students who
supports for Teachers select students who need additional support based on continued to demonstrate significant disruptive behaviors. In six
students their behavior in initial CW-FIT game sessions and choose from studies, teachers did not provide additional, targeted supports.
two types of supports based on student behavior. For students who
demonstrate attention-seeking behaviors, teachers show students
how to monitor and track their own behavior using an individual
version of the class point chart on their desks. For students who
demonstrate avoidant behaviors (for example, putting their head
down, leaving the room, or creating confrontations to avoid tasks),
teachers show students how to ask for extra assistance from the
teacher by holding up a help card. When introducing these supports,
teachers select a peer to join a small-group lesson with the focal
student or students to review appropriate behaviors, describe the
supports, and practice using them. While implementing sessions,
teachers praise students for appropriate use of the supports.
Training and Teachers can receive training from another staff member or from In all eight studies, teachers received training from the study authors.
support for a CW-FIT researcher or developer. Training content covers how In four studies, the study authors were also CW-FIT developers.
teachers to teach behavioral skills using lesson scripts from the CW-FIT In five studies, teachers received 90 minutes to 2 hours of training,
developer, monitor student behavior and award points, provide and in two studies teachers received 45 to 60 minutes of training.
skill-specific praise, and provide rewards. Training may also include In one study, teachers received 10 minutes of training, which
reviewing resources from the CW-FIT developer website, which involved reviewing lesson scripts for teaching the target skills.
include instructional videos of teachers implementing CW-FIT and
written guides that describe the components of the intervention and In five studies, teachers received ongoing coaching support,
how to implement them. Teachers can access additional materials sometimes in more than one way. In two of these studies, teachers
from the developer website, including posters depicting the target received additional coaching and modeling from the study authors
skills, lesson scripts, class point charts, and individual point charts during the sessions in which the teachers taught the target skills.
and help cards for providing targeted supports. In four of these studies, the study authors or CW-FIT coaches
conducted classroom observations and provided feedback to
Teachers often receive ongoing coaching support from staff teachers while teachers led CW-FIT sessions. Three studies do
members in their school or district when they start implementing not describe coaching support for teachers.
CW-FIT, including coaching and modeling during the introductory
sessions and classroom observations. Teachers might also need In the two studies in which teachers provided additional, targeted
additional training when introducing additional, targeted supports supports to students, teachers received additional training from the
to individual students. study authors or a CW-FIT coach on implementing these supports.
Notes: The descriptive information for this intervention comes from the developer website, https://cwfit.ku.edu/; the eight studies that meet WWC standards and have an effect
size or design-comparable effect size; and from correspondence with the developers. Information about implementation in the additional six single-case design studies for which
the WWC was unable to calculate a design-comparable effect size is provided in Appendix Table 2.
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For more information about CW-FIT
The University of Kansas
Juniper Gardens Children’s Project
444 Minnesota Ave #300
Kansas City, KS 66101
Email: [email protected] Web: https://cwfit.ku.edu/
Phone: (913) 897-8508
To request access to free training and implementation materials: https://cwfit.ku.edu/request-access/
LEARN MORE
Read the full intervention report to learn more about CW-FIT, how it was implemented in the studies that meet
standards, and what the studies found. Visit the WWC website for summaries of evidence on other interventions
and to learn more about the research the WWC has reviewed.