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Featured researches published by Sukhdeep Gill.


Journal of Educational Psychology | 2007

School and community climates and civic commitments: Patterns for ethnic minority and majority students

Constance A. Flanagan; Patricio Cumsille; Sukhdeep Gill; Leslie S. Gallay

The developmental correlates of diffuse support for the polity and civic commitments were explored in a survey of 1,052 students (mean age = 14.96 years) from African American, Arab American, European American, and Latino American backgrounds. Results of structural equation modeling revealed that regardless of their age, gender, or ethnic background, youth were more likely to believe that America was a just society and to commit to democratic goals if they felt a sense of community connectedness, especially if they felt that their teachers practiced a democratic ethic at school. Discussion focuses on the civic purposes of education in inculcating a sense of identification with the polity in younger generations.


American Educational Research Journal | 2009

Fostering High-Quality Teaching With an Enriched Curriculum and Professional Development Support:The Head Start REDI Program

Celene E. Domitrovich; Scott D. Gest; Sukhdeep Gill; Karen L. Bierman; Damon E. Jones

This randomized controlled trial tested whether teaching quality in Head Start classrooms could be improved with the addition of evidence-based curriculum components targeting emergent language or literacy and social-emotional development and the provision of associated professional development support. Participants were lead and assistant teachers in 44 Head Start classrooms. Teachers received 4 days of workshop training along with weekly in-class support from a mentor teacher. End-of-year observations indicated that compared with the control group, intervention teachers talked with children more frequently and in more cognitively complex ways, established a more positive classroom climate, and used more preventive behavior-management strategies. Results supported the conclusion that enriched curriculum components and professional development support can produce improvements in multiple domains of teaching quality.


Early Education and Development | 2013

Promoting Children's Social-Emotional Skills in Preschool Can Enhance Academic and Behavioral Functioning in Kindergarten: Findings From Head Start REDI

Robert L. Nix; Karen L. Bierman; Celene E. Domitrovich; Sukhdeep Gill

Research Findings: This study examined processes of change associated with the positive preschool and kindergarten outcomes of children who received the Head Start REDI (REsearch-based, Developmentally Informed) intervention compared to usual practice Head Start. Using data from a large-scale randomized controlled trial (N = 356 children, 42% African American or Latino, all from low-income families), this study tests the logic model that improving preschool social-emotional skills (e.g., emotion understanding, social problem solving, and positive social behavior) as well as language/emergent literacy skills will promote cross-domain academic and behavioral adjustment after children transition into kindergarten. Validating this logic model, the present study finds that intervention effects on 3 important kindergarten outcomes (e.g., reading achievement, learning engagement, and positive social behavior) were mediated by preschool gains in the proximal social-emotional and language/emergent literacy skills targeted by the REDI intervention. It is important to note that preschool gains in social-emotional skills made unique contributions to kindergarten outcomes in reading achievement and learning engagement, even after we accounted for concurrent preschool gains in vocabulary and emergent literacy skills. Practice or Policy: These findings highlight the importance of fostering at-risk childrens social-emotional skills during preschool as a means of promoting school readiness.


Journal of Adolescent Research | 2005

What Does Democracy Mean? Correlates of Adolescents’ Views

Constance A. Flanagan; Leslie S. Gallay; Sukhdeep Gill; Erin Gallay; Naana Obenewa Nti

The open-ended responses of 701 7th to 12th graders to the question “What does democracy mean to you?” were analyzed. In logistic regressions, age, parental education, political discussions, and participation in extracurricular activities distinguished youth who could define democracy (53%) from those who could not. Case clustering revealed three emphases in youths’ definitions: individual rights (30%), representative rule (40%), and civic equality (30%). These clusters did not vary by parental education or ethnicity, but several values that youth endorsed varied by parental education. Controlling for parental education, there were significant differences in adolescents’ reports of familial and personal values in the three clusters. Scheffe tests revealed that the equality cluster endorsed less materialism than other clusters, more environmental responsibility than the individual rights cluster, and more social responsibility than the representative rule cluster. In contrast, the individual rights cluster was most likely to report that social vigilance was emphasized in their families.


Early Education and Development | 2009

Individual Factors Associated With Professional Development Training Outcomes of the Head Start REDI Program

Celene E. Domitrovich; Scott D. Gest; Sukhdeep Gill; Damon E. Jones; Rebecca M. Sanford DeRousie

Research Findings: This study examined factors associated with process and content outcomes of the training provided in the context of Head Start REDI (Research based Developmentally Informed), a preschool curriculum designed to enhance the quality of interactions (social–emotional and language–literacy) between teachers and children. REDI professional development included 4 days of training and weekly coaching. Data for 22 intervention teaching pairs (N = 44) were used in the study. With the exception of years of education and emotional exhaustion, distal teacher factors (i.e., professional characteristics, personal resources, and perceptions of the work environment) were unrelated to implementation fidelity, whereas openness to consultation showed a significant association. Practice or Policy: The findings emphasize the importance of teacher engagement in the training process for program effectiveness.


Journal of Human Behavior in The Social Environment | 2007

Home Visitor Competence, Burnout, Support, and Client Engagement

Sukhdeep Gill; Mark T. Greenberg; Catherine Moon; Paula Margraf

ABSTRACT Home visitor characteristics, on-the-job training and support, job satisfaction, burnout, and turnover were examined over a five-year period. Home visitors were adequately trained, and scored high on measures of knowledge, competence, psychological functioning (indicated by measures of burnout and depression), and job satisfaction at program entry. Over time, home visitation was associated with higher emotional exhaustion and lower job satisfaction. Staff turnover was high during periods of program reorganization but had a positive impact on client engagement in that families served by more than one home visitor stayed in the program longer. Implications for program implementation are discussed.


Early Education and Development | 2013

Sustaining High-Quality Teaching and Evidence-Based Curricula: Follow-Up Assessment of Teachers in the REDI Project

Karen L. Bierman; Rebecca M. Sanford DeRousie; Brenda S. Heinrichs; Celene E. Domitrovich; Mark T. Greenberg; Sukhdeep Gill

Research Findings: Recent research has validated the power of evidence-based preschool interventions to improve teaching quality and promote child school readiness when implemented in the context of research trials. However, very rarely are follow-up assessments conducted with teachers in order to evaluate the maintenance of improved teaching quality or sustained use of evidence-based curriculum components after the intervention trial. In the current study, we collected follow-up assessments of teachers 1 year after their involvement in the REDI (REsearch-based, Developmentally Informed) research trial to evaluate the extent to which intervention teachers continued to implement the REDI curriculum components with high quality and to explore possible preintervention predictors of sustained implementation. In addition, we conducted classroom observations to determine whether general improvements in the teaching quality of intervention teachers (relative to control group teachers) were sustained. Results indicated sustained high-quality implementation of some curriculum components (the Promoting Alternative THinking Strategies curriculum) but decreased implementation of other components (the language/literacy components). Sustained intervention effects were evident on most aspects of general teaching quality targeted by the intervention. Practice or Policy: Implications for practice and policy are discussed.


Child Development | 2008

Promoting Academic and Social-Emotional School Readiness: The Head Start REDI Program.

Karen L. Bierman; Celene E. Domitrovich; Robert L. Nix; Scott D. Gest; Mark T. Greenberg; Clancy Blair; Keith E. Nelson; Sukhdeep Gill


Journal of School Psychology | 1999

Educational Expectations and School Achievement of Urban African American Children

Sukhdeep Gill; Arthur J. Reynolds


Early Education and Development | 2006

Language Development Subcontexts in Head Start Classrooms: Distinctive Patterns of Teacher Talk During Free Play, Mealtime, and Book Reading.

Scott D. Gest; Rebecca Holland-Coviello; Deborah L. Eicher-Catt; Sukhdeep Gill

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Celene E. Domitrovich

Pennsylvania State University

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Mark T. Greenberg

Pennsylvania State University

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Karen L. Bierman

Pennsylvania State University

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Scott D. Gest

Pennsylvania State University

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Robert L. Nix

Pennsylvania State University

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Arthur J. Reynolds

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Brenda S. Heinrichs

Pennsylvania State University

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Constance A. Flanagan

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Damon E. Jones

Pennsylvania State University

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Leslie S. Gallay

Pennsylvania State University

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