Assessing Quality Quickly: Validation of the Responsive Interactions for Learning - Educator (RIFL-Ed.) Measure


Journal article


Nina Sokolovic, Ashley Brunsek, Michelle Rodrigues, Sahar Borairi, Jennifer M. Jenkins, Michal Perlman
Early Education and Development, vol. 33, Informa {UK} Limited, 2021 May, pp. 1061--1076


Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Sokolovic, N., Brunsek, A., Rodrigues, M., Borairi, S., Jenkins, J. M., & Perlman, M. (2021). Assessing Quality Quickly: Validation of the Responsive Interactions for Learning - Educator (RIFL-Ed.) Measure. Early Education and Development, 33, 1061–1076. https://doi.org/10.1080/10409289.2021.1922851


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Sokolovic, Nina, Ashley Brunsek, Michelle Rodrigues, Sahar Borairi, Jennifer M. Jenkins, and Michal Perlman. “Assessing Quality Quickly: Validation of the Responsive Interactions for Learning - Educator (RIFL-Ed.) Measure.” Early Education and Development 33 (May 2021): 1061–1076.


MLA   Click to copy
Sokolovic, Nina, et al. “Assessing Quality Quickly: Validation of the Responsive Interactions for Learning - Educator (RIFL-Ed.) Measure.” Early Education and Development, vol. 33, Informa {UK} Limited, May 2021, pp. 1061–76, doi:10.1080/10409289.2021.1922851.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{sokolovic2021a,
  title = {Assessing Quality Quickly: Validation of the Responsive Interactions for Learning - Educator (RIFL-Ed.) Measure},
  year = {2021},
  month = may,
  journal = {Early Education and Development},
  pages = {1061--1076},
  publisher = {Informa {UK} Limited},
  volume = {33},
  doi = {10.1080/10409289.2021.1922851},
  author = {Sokolovic, Nina and Brunsek, Ashley and Rodrigues, Michelle and Borairi, Sahar and Jenkins, Jennifer M. and Perlman, Michal},
  month_numeric = {5}
}

Abstract

Research Findings: In this study, we tested whether it is possible to reliably evaluate the quality of interactions between early childhood educators and children using a thin-slice coding approach. Ninety-seven early childhood educators were videotaped for two five-minute intervals: one mealtime observation and one standardized activity. Videos were scored using the shortened and revised 15-item Responsive Interactions for Learning – Educator (RIFL-Ed.) measure, an open-access measure that takes less than ten minutes to administer and score. The RIFL-Ed. demonstrated good psychometric properties when used for mealtime observations and scores were associated with the Emotional and Behavioural Support (b = 0.19, p = .02) – and to some extent the Engaged Support for Learning (b = 0.15, p = 0.07) – domains of the widely used Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS): Toddler Version. Less than half of the variance in scores was shared across educators in the same classrooms. Practice or Policy: If these preliminary results can be confirmed in larger studies, the RIFL-Ed.—an open-access measure for which fast and free online training is available– can be used to affordably scale-up targeted quality assessment and improvement efforts in early childhood education and care settings, efforts which have been shown to positively impact children’s developmental outcomes.