An Exploratory Comparison of Milieu Teaching and Responsive Interaction in Classroom Applications
- 1 July 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Early Intervention
- Vol. 19 (3) , 218-242
- https://doi.org/10.1177/105381519501900306
Abstract
An exploratory study was conducted to compare 2 naturalistic language intervention methods: milieu teaching and responsive interaction. Classroom teachers implemented the treatment methods in 6 classrooms. Thirty-six children were matched on 4 pretreatment language measures and assigned to 1 of the 2 treatments. No main effects for treatment were found. However, milieu teaching was more effective than responsive interaction in facilitating receptive language and expressive vocabulary, if the children began intervention with relatively low receptive or expressive language levels. In contrast, responsive interaction was more effective than milieu teaching in facilitating receptive language and expressive vocabulary if the children began intervention with relatively high receptive or expressive language levels. The explanations for these results suggest several directions for future research and highlight the increasingly common finding that no 1 intervention is superior for all children.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Individual Differences in Language Delayed Children's Responses to Direct and Interactive Preschool InstructionTopics in Early Childhood Special Education, 1991
- Defining language delay in young children by cognitive referencing: Are we saying more than we know?Applied Psycholinguistics, 1990
- Effects of Imitation on Language Comprehension and Transfer to Production in Children with Mental RetardationJournal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1989
- Modifying Parent-Child Interaction: Enhancing the Development of Handicapped ChildrenThe Journal of Special Education, 1988
- An Effect of Modeling and Imitation Teaching Procedures on Children with and without Specific Language ImpairmentJournal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1987
- The Unit of Analysis: Group Means Versus Individual ObservationsAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1982
- Accounting for individual differences when comparing the effectiveness of remedial language teaching methodsApplied Psycholinguistics, 1980
- Interobserver agreement, reliability, and generalizability of data collected in observational studies.Psychological Bulletin, 1979
- INCIDENTAL TEACHING OF LANGUAGE IN THE PRESCHOOL1Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1975
- A First LanguagePublished by Harvard University Press ,1973