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NCJRS Abstract


The document referenced below is part of the NCJRS Library collection.
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NCJ Number: NCJ 238972   Add to Shopping cart   Find in a Library
Title: Evaluating the Implementation of a Family-Focused Prevention Program: Effectiveness of SAFE Children
Author(s): David B. Henry ; Patrick H. Tolan ; Deborah Gorman-Smith ; Michael E. Schoeny ; Jack Zwanziger ; Sage Kim
Date Published: 02/2012
Page Count: 69
Sponsoring Agency: National Institute of Justice
US Dept Justice
Office of Justice Programs
United States
Grant Number: 2006-JP-FX-0062
Sale Source: National Institute of Justice/NCJRS
Box 6000
Rockville, MD 20849
United States

NCJRS Photocopy Services
Box 6000
Rockville, MD 20849-6000
United States
Document: PDF 
Agency Summary: Agency Summary 
Dataset: Dataset archived in the National Archive of Criminal Justice Data (http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/NACJD)
Type: Program/project evaluations
Language: English
Country: United States
Annotation: This report presents the methodology and findings of an evaluation of the SAFEChildren intervention, which is a family-oriented delinquency prevention program for parents facing the challenges of raising their children in inner-city communities.
Abstract: The evaluation found that the intervention resulted in increased levels of academic achievement and parental involvement in school. Intervention participants increased reading skills at a rate approximating national norms. In contrast, control students (matched students not participating in the intervention) were just below the national average at the same point in time. Intervention families maintained levels of parental involvement in their children’s schooling over the 2½ years of the study; however, control families showed decreasing parental involvement. Intervention children in high-risk families showed decreased aggression over time, but high-risk controls had no change in aggression. Intervention children from high-risk families also had positive increases in measured concentration and social competence; control children showed no change in these developmental areas. Among high-risk families, the crucial skills of parental monitoring improved for those in the intervention, but were unchanged for high-risk control families. In a longer term booster intervention and follow-up study, evaluators recruited and tracked 382 of the original 424 SAFE Efficacy Trial participants. There were several sustained effects on children with high initial aggression, including effects on parental monitoring, parental use of effective discipline practices, and parental involvement in school. These results suggest the maintenance of initial effects and the emergence of new effects that impact children and youth at greatest risk for later delinquency. The intervention consists of a reading tutoring program and a family-focused intervention (20 weeks duration) provided during the child’s first-grade year. Weekly multiple-family group meetings (approximately five families per group) address issues of parenting, family relationships, child development, and parental involvement in their child’s schooling. 23 tables and approximately 80 references
Main Term(s): Juvenile delinquency preventn prgs
Index Term(s): Juvenile delinquency factors ; Parent education ; Family intervention programs ; Juvenile/family relations ; Effectiveness of crime preventn prgs ; Parental attitudes ; Parental influence ; Family advocacy programs ; NIJ final report
 
To cite this abstract, use the following link:
https://www.ncjrs.gov/App/Publications/abstract.aspx?ID=261029

* A link to the full-text document is provided whenever possible. For documents not available online, a link to the publisher's web site is provided.


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