This study evaluates the effectiveness of a culturally adapted, home-based program designed to improve language and cognitive development in Arab toddlers in Israel. Families with children aged 18-36 months will participate in eight weekly sessions delivered in their homes. The intervention teaches parents strategies to enhance their child's language, communication, and problem-solving through play, daily routines, and story time. A comparison group will receive eight sessions on child health promotion (nutrition, sleep, safety, etc.). Child outcomes will be assessed using the Clinical Adaptive Test/Clinical Linguistic and Auditory Milestone Scale (CAT-CLAMS) and the Arabic Communicative Development Inventories (CDI). This research aims to provide an evidence-based, scalable model for early childhood interventions in disadvantaged populations.
Arab children aged 0-3 years in Israel are considered at high risk for cognitive, linguistic, and educational disadvantages due to structural and socio-cultural factors, including poverty, geographic and social marginalisation, and underutilization of daycare and health services. Despite evidence that early intervention supports language and cognitive development, few culturally adapted, evidence-based programs have been evaluated in this population. This study evaluates a home-based, culturally adapted early childhood intervention designed to enhance language, communication, and problem-solving skills in Arab toddlers (18-36 months). The intervention is guided by Bronfenbrenner's ecological framework and emphasises caregiver responsiveness, considering the child's developmental characteristics, the caregiver's behaviour, and the family's physical and social environment. The program consists of eight weekly sessions delivered in the family's home, focusing on three contexts: play, daily routines, and shared story time. Parents are guided to optimise the home environment, follow the child's interests, and use responsive behaviours such as joint attention, labelling, expansions, imitation, questioning, and scaffolding. Sessions progress from play-based strategies to generalisation in routines and storybook reading. Families randomised to the control arm receive eight home-based health-promotion sessions, matched in frequency and duration, covering topics such as nutrition, sleep routines, vaccinations, and toilet training. This serves as an attention-control condition without direct cognitive or language stimulation. Participants include children aged 18-36 months with no severe medical conditions, birth weight ≥1500g, and scores at the lower end of the normative range on the CAT-CLAMS (approximately -1 to -2 SD below the mean). Caregivers must agree to participate and must not show moderate-to-severe depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 ≥10). Recruitment will occur via community healthcare centres ("well-baby" clinics). Primary outcomes are changes in language and cognitive development, assessed with the CAT-CLAMS and the Arabic adaptation of the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventories (CDI). Secondary outcomes include caregiver-reported developmental concerns measured by the Parents' Evaluation of Developmental Status (PEDS). Assessments occur at baseline and one month post-intervention by blinded evaluators. This trial will provide critical evidence regarding culturally adapted, parent-implemented interventions in marginalised populations. By addressing the ecological context of Arab families in Israel, the program aims to strengthen early language and cognitive skills, reduce risk of later academic and social difficulties, and contribute to the evidence base for scalable early developmental interventions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
240
A culturally adapted, parent-implemented home program designed to enhance toddlers' language, communication, and problem-solving skills. Trained facilitators deliver eight weekly 30-45-minute sessions in the family's home. Sessions focus on three everyday contexts-play, daily routines, and shared story time. Parents are guided to optimise the home environment, follow the child's interests, and use responsive interaction strategies such as joint attention, labelling, expansions, imitation, questioning, and scaffolding. Sessions progress from play-based interaction to integration into routines and storytelling.
Eight weekly home-based sessions delivered by trained facilitators, focusing on child health and wellbeing (nutrition, sleep, safety, vaccination, and toilet training). Sessions match the intervention arm in frequency, duration, and contact time but do not include language or cognitive stimulation components.
Community Health Centres - Northern, Central, and Southern Israel
Beersheba, Israel
Change in Arabic-CDI total vocabulary score
Parent-reported receptive and expressive vocabulary.
Time frame: Baseline to 1-month post-intervention
Change in the CAT-CLAMS total score
: Measures language, communication, problem-solving, and adaptive behaviours.
Time frame: Baseline to 1-month post-intervention
Change in PEDS parental concern score
Parent reported developmental concerns
Time frame: Baseline to 1-month post-intervention
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