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Using Research Evidence to Inform and Evaluate Early Childhood Intervention Practices
Carl J. Dunst*
and
Carol M. Trivette
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dunst{at}puckett.org.
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Abstract |
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This article includes descriptions of a process used to conduct practice-based research syntheses and the manner in which synthesis findings are used to inform and evaluate early childhood intervention practices. The main focus of a practice-based research synthesis is the unbundling of an intervention practice to identify those practice characteristics that are associated with desired outcomes and benefits. Also described are how the characteristics identified as most important are used to develop evidence-based practices and how the characteristics can be used as benchmarks to assess the likelihood that an untested practice will be effective. The article concludes with a discussion of the tension between research and practice and how that tension might be mitigated.
First published on December 29, 2008, doi:10.1177/0271121408329227
Topics in Early Childhood Special Education 2009;29:40.
A more recent version of this article appeared on May 1, 2009

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