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Helping Children Adjust—a Tri-Ministry Study: II. Program Effects
Ist Teil von
Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, 1999-10, Vol.40 (7), p.1061-1073
Ort / Verlag
Oxford, UK and Boston, USA: Cambridge University Press
Erscheinungsjahr
1999
Quelle
Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
Beschreibungen/Notizen
This report describes program effects of the Tri-Ministry Study—a school-based,
longitudinal trial carried out over a 5-year period to assess the effectiveness of classwide
social skills training (SS), partner reading (RE), and a combination of both (SS & RE) to
reduce maladjustment among children in the primary division (up to grade 3) of Ontario
schools. It also places these effects in the context of other school-based prevention studies
and discusses them in view of important methodological and programmatic issues. The
incremental effects attributable to the intervention programs were small and sporadic. There
were statistically significant increases in prosocial behaviour observed in the playgrounds of
intervention schools with no differentiation by program type. Furthermore, there was some
evidence—a reduction in teacher and parent-rated externalising problems—that the
combination of SS & RE and SS alone may have had modest beneficial effects. A review of
nine other school-based studies, which evaluated universally delivered mental health
prevention programs in general populations of students, revealed similar mixed results.
There are both methodologic and programmatic issues implicated in the weak findings that
have been reported to date. These issues need to be addressed to advance knowledge about
the potential impact of mental-health prevention initiatives delivered universally through
school-based programs. A companion paper gives the specific details on the programs,
randomisation of schools, selection of subjects, measurements, and analysis.