Incredible Years Teacher Classroom Management

The Incredible Years Teacher Classroom Management (IY-TCM) programme is a universal classroom management programme for teachers of children between the ages of four and eight.
The programme aims to improve teacher competencies in supporting children in the classroom, and developing children’s social, emotional and problem-solving skills. Incredible Years group leaders work with teachers to develop specific skills include proactive teacher strategies around behaviour management.
EIF Programme Assessment
Child outcomes
This programme can affect outcomes for children in Active and healthy, physical and mental wellbeing.
According to the best available evidence for this programme's impact, it can achieve the following positive outcomes for children:
Supporting children's mental health and wellbeing
Reduced emotional symptoms (teacher report)
based on study 2
Improved emotional self-regulation (teacher report)
based on study 3
Improved social competence (teacher report)
based on study 3
Enhancing school achievement & employment
Reduction in child off-task behaviour and teacher commands
based on study 1
- Statement: 1.45-point improvement on the Teacher-Pupil Observation Tool (off-task behaviour – coded observation)
- Score: 18
- Timeframe: Immediately after the intervention
- Statement: 10.22-point improvement on the Teacher-Pupil Observation Tool (teacher commands – coded observation)
- Score: 18
- Timeframe: Immediately after the intervention
Reduced child negatives to teacher
based on study 1
- Statement: 1.28-point improvement on the Teacher-Pupil Observation Tool (negative behaviours towards the teacher – coded observation)
- Score: 16
- Timeframe: Immediately after the intervention
Increase in child compliance
based on study 1
- Statement: 6.37-point improvement on the Teacher-Pupil Observation Tool (child compliance – coded observation)
- Score: 14
- Timeframe: Immediately after the intervention
Preventing crime, violence and antisocial behaviour
Improved prosocial behaviour (teacher report)
based on study 3
This programme also has evidence of supporting positive outcomes for couples, parents or families that may be relevant to a commissioning decision. Please see About the evidence for more detail.
Who is it for?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to the following age-groups:
Preschool Primary school
How is it delivered?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to implementation through these delivery models:
- Group
Where is it delivered?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to its implementation in these settings:
- Primary school
How is it targeted?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to its implementation as:
- Universal
Where has it been implemented?
- England
- Ireland
- Jamaica
- New Zealand
- Norway
- Portugal
- Scotland
- United States
- Wales
Ireland provision
Ireland evaluation
About the programme
What happens during the delivery?
How is it delivered?
- IY-TCM is delivered to groups of teachers in six full-day sessions over the course of six months.
- IY Group Leaders work with the groups of teachers over the six sessions.
What happens during the intervention?
- IY-TCM aims to teach teachers how to develop a positive relationship with children through child-directed play, academic, persistence, social and emotional coaching methods and using a positive discipline hierarchy with an emphases on use of prompts, reminders, redirects, planned ignore and proximal praise for minor inappropriate behaviours. In addition throughout all the workshop sessions teachers are helped to promote positive social skills and emotional literacy and problem-solving.
- The methods used during the sessions include videotape modelling through the use of vignettes, practising and rehearsing through role-plays and discussions, developing individual behaviour plans, and giving homework assignments at the end of every session so that teachers can practise new skills in their own classrooms between sessions.
- During every session, discussions include how teachers can involve parents in promoting positive behaviours at home and developing a strong parent-teacher partnership to strengthen academic outcomes as well as social and emotional competence. Parents are included in behaviour plans.
- As teachers learn specific skills in the group-based training, they are then followed individually by a coach who conducts classroom observations, provides performance feedback, and assists with problem-solving, goal-setting, and implementation of strategies and behaviour plans developed in workshops.
What are the implementation requirements?
Who can deliver it?
- The two practitioners who deliver this programme are professionals with an education or psychology background with NFQ-7/8 level qualifications.
What are the training requirements?
- The practitioners have six days of programme training. Booster training of practitioners is recommended. The practitioners are trained by IY Group Leaders.
How are the practitioners supervised?
- It is recommended that practitioners are supervised by two host agency supervisors qualified to NFQ-9/10 level with two days of programme training.
- It is also recommended that practitioners are supervised by three programme developer mentors and trainers qualified to NFQ-9/10 level with two days of programme training.
What are the systems for maintaining fidelity?
- Training manual
- Other printed material
- Other online material
- Video or DVD training
- Face-to-face training
- Fidelity monitoring
- An accreditation process
Is there a licensing requirement?
There is a licence required to run this programme.
How does it work? (Theory of Change)
How does it work?
- Social, emotional, and behavioural problems in young schoolchildren can pose significant challenges for teachers in the classroom, but with appropriate training, teachers can learn to better manage these kinds of problems and promote more positive social behaviour, thereby creating more effective (and calmer) learning environments and more positive educational outcomes.
- The IY-TCM programme aims to strengthen teachers’ classroom management strategies and promote children’s prosocial behaviour and school readiness, whilst reducing children’s classroom aggression and non-cooperation with peers and teachers.
- Intended short-term outcomes include increased social and emotional competence with peers in classroom, increased child problem solving skills, reductions in behaviour problems, increased academic readiness, on task, focused behaviours and cooperation with teachers and peers.
- In the longer term, the programme aims to reduce a range of antisocial behaviour. This includes reductions in aggressive & destructive behaviour, inattention & conduct problems, reduced likelihood of involvement with deviant peer groups, reduced special education referrals, reduced likelihood of dropping out of school, increased academic achievement, reduced likelihood of involvement in criminal activities and reduced drug and alcohol use.
Intended outcomes
- Achieving in all areas of learning and development
- Active and healthy, physical and mental wellbeing
- Safe and protected from harm
Contact details
Archways
About the evidence
IY-TCM's most rigorous evidence comes from an RCT that was conducted in Wales. This study identified statistically significant positive impact on a number of child outcomes.
This programme has evidence from at least one rigorously conducted RCT along with evidence from an additional comparison group study. Subsequently, the programme receives a 3+ rating overall.
Study 1
Citation: | Hutchings et al. (2013) |
Design: | RCT |
Country: | Wales |
Sample: | 170 children from 3 to 7 years recruited on the basis of SDQ scores |
Timing: | Post-intervention (one academic year after baseline) |
Child outcomes: |
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Other outcomes: |
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Study rating: | 3 |
Hutchings, J., Martin-Forbes, P., Daley, D., & Williams, M. E. (2013). A randomized controlled trial of the impact of a teacher classroom management program on the classroom behavior of children with and without behavior problems. Journal of School Psychology, 51(5), 571–585.
Available at
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24060060
Study design and sample
This study involved random assignment of children to an IY-TCM group and a business as usual group.
This study was conducted in Wales, with a sample of 170 children between 3 and 7 years, recruited on the basis of SDQ scores.
Measures
The Teacher-Pupil Observation Tool (TPOT) was used to assess child behaviour in the classroom and teachers’ interactions with the children.
Findings
This study identified statistically significant positive impact on a number of child and teacher outcomes using the TPOT. This includes improvements in child compliance, child negatives to the teacher, child off-task behaviour, total number of commands, and teacher negatives to children.
Study 2
Citation: | Hickey et al. (2015) |
Design: | RCT |
Country: | Ireland |
Sample: | 445 children (mean age of 5.4 years) balanced in terms of low, medium and high levels of behavioural problems on the SDQ |
Timing: | Post-intervention (6 months after baseline) |
Child outcomes: |
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Other outcomes: | |
Study rating: | 2+ |
Hickey, G., McGilloway, S., Hyland, L., Leckey, Y., Kelly, P., Bywater, T., … O’Neill, D. (2015). Exploring the effects of a universal classroom management training programme on teacher and child behaviour: A group randomised controlled trial and cost analysis. Journal of Early Childhood Research, doi: 10.1177/1476718X15579747.
Available at
http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1476718X15579747
Study design and sample
This study involved random assignment of 22 teachers to an IY-TCM treatment group and a business as usual control group.
This study was conducted in south-west Ireland, with a sample of 445 children with an average age of 5.4 from 11 primary schools. These were comprised of eight urban schools, two semi-urban schools and one rural school. The sample included a selection of ‘index’ children designed to ensure a balance of children with high, medium and low levels of behavioural problems.
Measures
Self-reported frequency of teachers’ use of positive and negative classroom management strategies, and the perceived utility of these strategies was measured using the Teacher Strategies Questionnaire (TSQ). Child behaviour and wellbeing was assessed using the teacher version of the SDQ and the Teacher-Pupil Observation Tool (TPOT) was used to provide observations of teacher and pupil behaviour.
Findings
This study identified a statistically significant positive impact on a child outcome. At follow-up, children in the treatment group were reported to show less emotional symptoms on the SDQ than those in the control group.
Study 3
Citation: | Reinke, Herman & Dong (2016) |
Design: | RCT |
Country: | United States |
Sample: | 1,817 students from schools serving primarily African American students |
Timing: | Post-intervention (one academic year after baseline) |
Child outcomes: |
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Other outcomes: |
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Study rating: | 2+ |
Reinke, W. N., Herman, K. C., & Dong, N. (2016). The Incredible Years Teacher Classroom Management program: Outcomes from a group randomized trial. Unpublished Manuscript. Retrieved from (http://incredibleyears.com/wp-content/uploads/Reinke-IY-TCM-Program-Outcomes.pdf).
Available at
http://www.incredibleyears.com/wp-content/uploads/Reinke-IY-TCM-Program-Outcomes.pdf
Study design and sample
This study involved random assignment of children to an IY-TCM group and a wait-list business as usual control group.
This study was conducted in the midwestern United States, with a sample of 105 teachers and 1,817 children in kindergarten to third grade. The schools served primarily African American students.
Measures
Child disruptive behaviours, concentration problems, emotional dysregulation, and prosocial behaviour was measured using the Teacher Observation of Classroom Adaption-Checklist (TOCA-C). Teacher’s perception of a child’s prosocial behaviour, emotional self-regulation, and academic competence was measured using The Revised Social Competence Scale-Teacher version (T-COMP). Child ability in reading and mathematics was assessed using The Woodcock-Johnson III Normative Update Tests of Achievement (WJ III ACH).
Findings
This study identified statistically significant positive impact on a number of child outcomes. This includes prosocial behaviour, emotional dysregulation, and overall social competence (TOCA-C).