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Dive into the research topics where Andrew J. Mashburn is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew J. Mashburn.


Early Education and Development | 2006

Social Relationships and School Readiness

Andrew J. Mashburn; Robert C. Pianta

Definitions of school readiness tend to focus on social and academic competencies that children are presumed to need to start school ready to learn. However, a child-focused definition of school readiness is limited because it neither identifies processes that lead children to acquire these competencies, nor does it recognize childrens dependence on opportunities within settings that support development of these competencies. The model of school readiness presented in this article broadly defines school readiness as a function of an organized system of interactions and transactions among people (children, teachers, parents, and other caregivers), settings (home, school, and child care), and institutions (communities, neighborhoods, and governments). We propose that the primary mechanisms through which children acquire readiness-related competencies are social relationships children form with peers, parents, and teachers. This perspective on school readiness, emphasizing the mediating role of relational processes, offers guidance for designing interventions to improve school readiness through strengthening relationships between parents and children, parents and teachers, and teachers and children.


Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment | 2006

Teacher and Classroom Characteristics Associated with Teachers' Ratings of Prekindergartners' Relationships and Behaviors.

Andrew J. Mashburn; Bridget K. Hamre; Jason T. Downer; Robert C. Pianta

Teachers’ ratings of children’s competencies may in part reflect characteristics and perspectives of teachers who assigned the ratings, which compromises their validity as a measure of child attributes. The purposes of this study were to use multilevel modeling to (a) estimate between-rater variance in teachers’ ratings of children’s social behaviors and relationships with teachers and (b) examine characteristics of teachers and classrooms associated with teachers’ perceptions of these social competencies. Ratings of 711 children completed by 210 prekindergarten teachers indicated that between 15% and 33% of the total variance in teachers’ ratings was attributed to mean differences between raters. After controlling for characteristics of children and their families, teachers’ ratings of positive relationships and behaviors were associated with fewer years of experience, higher self-efficacy, non-White race/ethnicity, shorter length programs, better child-teacher ratios, and programs located within school settings. Implications are discussed for interpreting and analyzing teachers’ ratings of children’s competencies.


Elementary School Journal | 2013

Teaching through interactions: Testing a developmental framework of teacher effectiveness in over 4,000 classrooms

Bridget K. Hamre; Robert C. Pianta; Jason T. Downer; Jamie DeCoster; Andrew J. Mashburn; Stephanie M. Jones; Joshua L. Brown; Elise Cappella; Marc S. Atkins; Susan E. Rivers; Marc A. Brackett; Aki Hamagami

This is a copy of an article published in the Elementary School Journal


Applied Developmental Science | 2008

Quality of Social and Physical Environments in Preschools and Children's Development of Academic, Language, and Literacy Skills.

Andrew J. Mashburn

This study examined associations between quality of social and physical environments in preschools and childrens development of academic, language, and literacy skills, and the extent to which preschool quality moderated the associations between child risk and development. Participants were a diverse sample of 540 four-year-old children in Georgia who attended Head Start, the Georgia Pre-Kindergarten Program, or private preschools. Controlling for childrens gender, family income, race/ethnicity, preschool program type, and pretest performance, high-quality social environments were positively associated with childrens academic and literacy skills at the end of preschool. Quality of the physical environment was not associated with childrens outcomes at the end of preschool; however, higher quality physical environments moderated the negative associations between income and academic development and between non-White race/ethnicity and literacy development.


Early Education and Development | 2008

Relationships Between Teachers and Preschoolers Who Are At Risk: Contribution of Children's Language Skills, Temperamentally Based Attributes, and Gender

Laura M. Justice; Elizabeth A. Cottone; Andrew J. Mashburn; Sara E. Rimm-Kaufman

Research Findings: The teacher–child relationship can provide an important support to young children who exhibit developmental risk. This research studied the contribution of childrens language skills, temperamentally based attributes (shyness, anger), and gender to closeness and conflict in the teacher–child relationship for 133 preschoolers attending programs serving at-risk children. The results showed that both language comprehension (positive predictor) and shyness (negative predictor) were significantly linked to closeness in the teacher–child relationship. An additional result was that children who displayed greater anger within the classroom had relationships with their teachers characterized by higher levels of conflict, and both gender and language expression served as moderators for the relationship between anger and teacher–child conflict. Practice or Policy: These findings are important for considering how various skills and attributes of preschool children may contribute to their formation of trusting and secure relationships with their classroom teachers.


Developmental Psychology | 2010

Early Behavioral Associations of Achievement Trajectories.

Kevin J. Grimm; Joel S. Steele; Andrew J. Mashburn; Margaret Burchinal; Robert C. Pianta

Duncan et al. (2007) examined associations between early behavioral and cognitive skills with later achievement. These associations were examined in 6 different data sets and results converged to suggest that early behavioral competences or problems had little, if any, prediction to later achievement and that attentional competences had small positive relations with later achievement. In contrast, cognitive abilities were by far the strongest predictors of achievement. We provide and investigate potential reasons why Duncan et al. found little to no association between behavior and later achievement in a reanalysis of data from 3 studies previously analyzed by Duncan et al. Potential reasons include the validity of the behavioral measures, treatment of the behavioral measures as continuous as opposed to categorical, and the choice of data analytic method. In this article, we discuss these issues at greater length and address them in our reanalysis. We also bring into question the nature of the relationship between behavior and achievement. Generally, our reanalysis supports the idea that attention measures are more predictive than behavioral measures; however, certain behavior measures showed small to moderate associations to concurrent levels of academic achievement and changes in academic achievement through elementary school.


Early Education and Development | 2012

Promoting Young Children's Social Competence through the Preschool PATHS Curriculum and MyTeachingPartner Professional Development Resources

Bridget K. Hamre; Robert C. Pianta; Andrew J. Mashburn; Jason T. Downer

Research Findings: Childrens (n = 980) social competence during prekindergarten was assessed as a function of their teachers’ (n = 233) exposure to the Preschool Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies (PATHS) curriculum and 2 levels of support through MyTeachingPartner, a Web-based approach to professional development. Children in classrooms that implemented PATHS had increased levels of teacher-reported social competence over the course of the year. There were no associations between the use of PATHS and reductions in teacher-reported social problems. The results also suggested that teachers who used the MyTeachingPartner website more often reported greater gains in childrens social competence. Practice or Policy: These findings have implications for the development and dissemination of social-emotional learning curricula and the provision of effective implementation supports for teachers. Continued work on the best ways to integrate technology into the professional development of teachers, both in service and preservice, is likely to enhance the accessibility and quality of supports for teachers.


Elementary School Journal | 2011

Within-Day Variability in the Quality of Classroom Interactions during Third and Fifth Grade

Timothy W. Curby; Megan W. Stuhlman; Kevin J. Grimm; Andrew J. Mashburn; Lia Chomat-Mooney; Jason T. Downer; Bridget K. Hamre; Robert C. Pianta

The quality of classroom interactions has typically been studied using aggregates of ratings over time. However, within-day ratings may contain important variability. This study investigated within-day variability using the NICHD Study of Early Childcare and Youth Development’s observational data during grades 3 and 5. The first question examined the stability of classroom interaction quality within a day, and the second question examined the extent to which time of day, activity setting, numbers of adults and children, and instructional grouping predicted the quality of classroom interactions within a day. Results indicated that classroom interactions were most stable within emotional support dimensions and least stable within instructional support dimensions. Results also indicated that the start of the day and transitions were associated with lower-quality classroom interactions. Academic activities, more teachers, fewer students, and group instruction were associated with higher quality. Implications are discussed in terms of understanding students’ experiences and conducting classroom observations.


Prevention Science | 2014

Improving the Power of an Efficacy Study of a Social and Emotional Learning Program: Application of Generalizability Theory to the Measurement of Classroom-Level Outcomes

Andrew J. Mashburn; Jason T. Downer; Susan E. Rivers; Marc A. Brackett; Andres Martinez

Social and emotional learning programs are designed to improve the quality of social interactions in schools and classrooms in order to positively affect students’ social, emotional, and academic development. The statistical power of group randomized trials to detect effects of social and emotional learning programs and other preventive interventions on setting-level outcomes is influenced by the reliability of the outcome measure. In this paper, we apply generalizability theory to an observational measure of the quality of classroom interactions that is an outcome in a study of the efficacy of a social and emotional learning program called The Recognizing, Understanding, Labeling, Expressing, and Regulating emotions Approach. We estimate multiple sources of error variance in the setting-level outcome and identify observation procedures to use in the efficacy study that most efficiently reduce these sources of error. We then discuss the implications of using different observation procedures on both the statistical power and the monetary costs of conducting the efficacy study.


American Journal of Education | 2008

The District Effect: Systemic Responses to High Stakes Accountability Policies in Six Southern States.

V. Darleen Opfer; Gary T. Henry; Andrew J. Mashburn

High stakes accountability (HSA) reforms were enacted in state after state and federally through the No Child Left Behind law, based on the belief that incentives that have consequences attached are effective ways to motivate educators to improve student performance. Our focus for this article is on school district level responses to HSA reforms that could produce positive changes in teaching and learning. We set out to determine whether a district effect was present in the implementation of HSA systems in six southern states and whether that effect was accompanied by the types of activities previously identified in the research literature as being associated with changes in teaching and learning and student achievement. We tested a theory of action that assumed that HSA would cause school districts to develop coherent instructional strategies that would be evidenced by the provision of coherent, high‐quality professional development and the alignment of district policy and resources in support of school improvement. These activities on the part of districts would then improve student achievement as measured by state tests.

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Margaret Burchinal

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Ellen Peisner-Feinberg

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Anamarie Auger

University of California

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