CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
N/ACompleted· 605 enrolled
Drug / intervention
The EASEL (Enhancing And Supporting Early Development to Better Children's Lives) Approachbehavioral
Likely dose
Not stated in record
Structured eligibility isn't available for this trial yet — see the full criteria in the Eligibility tab below.

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Search/NCT05445947
NCT05445947N/ACompleted

Enhancing And Supporting Early Development to Better Children's Lives (EASEL) Trial

National University of Singapore·interventional·Posted Jul 6, 2022·Updated Dec 11, 2023

In Brief

A clinical study evaluating The EASEL (Enhancing And Supporting Early Development to Better Children's Lives) Approach for Child Development. Completed, enrolled 605 participants across 4 sites.

Detailed Summary

In The Lancet's series on advancing early childhood development, provision of high-quality early childhood care and education was listed as one of the main factors that can maximize children's potential to succeed in later life, particularly children from vulnerable or disadvantaged backgrounds. High-quality early childhood care and education is widely understood to be important for equipping children with essential skills and competencies across academic and non-academic areas, which in turn increases school readiness and has long-reaching impacts on outcomes later in life. Despite the government's efforts to support the early childhood sector, educators in Singapore continue to report difficulties in implementing practices in classrooms that promote children's social, emotional and cognitive development. To enhance educators' skills in these domains, we developed the Enhancing and Supporting Early development to better children's Lives (EASEL) Approach, a set of universal educator-led practices for use with 3-6-year-old children to improve social, emotional, behavioral and executive functioning (SEB+EF) outcomes. This study will evaluate the implementation and effectiveness of the EASEL Approach on improving early childhood educators' teaching practices and in turn, children's SEB+EF outcomes. We will conduct a type 2 hybrid implementation-effectiveness design in a cluster randomized controlled trial in 10-12 childcare centers. We will use the EPIS (Explore, Prepare, Implement, Sustain) Framework to support the implementation of the EASEL Approach. Implementation strategies include training, educator self-assessments, practice-based coaching, and data monitoring. Primary outcomes include educator's teaching practices and their adoption of the EASEL Approach in everyday practice. Secondary outcomes include the acceptability and feasibility of the EASEL Approach and children's SEB+EF outcomes. Quantitative and qualitative data will be collected at baseline, three months and six months.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
CountriesSingapore
Collaborators--

Timeline

N/ACompletedFinished
2023202420252026
First PostedJul 6, 2022
Enrollment StartFeb 6, 2023
Primary CompletionOct 27, 2023
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 9 monthsPosted 4.0 years ago

Interventions

The EASEL (Enhancing And Supporting Early Development to Better Children's Lives) Approachbehavioral

The EASEL Approach consists of a set of educator-led practices that can be incorporated into the daily classroom environment for children three to six years of age. The overall purpose of this approach is to enhance early childhood educators' teaching practices that would promote children's SEB+EF development. Nine EASEL practices were selected for inclusion in the EASEL Approach. These are a) core fundamental practices that are evidence-based, b) practices that expert stakeholders identified as ones for which local early childhood educators may need additional training, c) practices that are not already covered in pre-service training to avoid replication for educators, d) a combination of practices that educators may already be implementing and can enhance, and new practices, and e) a balance of antecedent and consequential practices (i.e., practices that can be implemented before and after a target behavior).