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Zhe Dong; Gijs Huitsing; René Veenstra – Prevention Science, 2025
Anti-bullying programs can create more positive classroom environments by fostering the development of positive leaders who establish constructive norms. The social identity theory of leadership addresses stability and change within different leader profiles and identifies leader group prototypicality: the extent to which leaders are perceived to…
Descriptors: Bullying, Prevention, Intervention, Program Effectiveness
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Jun Hao; Yeh Hsueh; Katherine Kitzmann; Haojie Yuan; Yaping Yue – Early Education and Development, 2025
Research Findings: Parental supervision, parental risk perception, and parental risk attitudes constitute an important parenting environment for the development of young children. To examine the mechanisms of Chinese parenting environment on young children's risk-taking behaviors, this study first established a four-factor model and surveyed 497…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Rearing, Parenting Styles, Parent Attitudes
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Greta L. Doctoroff; Frances Wymbs; Anil Chacko; Eliana Rabinovitz – Prevention Science, 2025
Group preventative parent training programs (PPTPs) have been used successfully to improve outcomes for families living in poverty in settings such as Head Start. Nevertheless, such programs face significant enrollment and engagement challenges. Given that research on factors related to parent preferences for group PPTP participation is limited,…
Descriptors: Federal Programs, Low Income Students, Social Services, Parent Participation
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Julie Murray; Charlie Rioux; Sophie Parent; Jean R. Séguin; Michelle Pinsonneault; William D. Fraser; Natalie Castellanos-Ryan – Prevention Science, 2024
Parenting programs have been shown to be effective in preventing and reducing externalising problems in young children. Despite their efficacy, the low rate of initial parental engagement in these programs is a major challenge for clinicians and researchers. Few studies have examined factors associated with rates of initial engagement in parenting…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Parent Education, Prevention, Child Behavior
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P. Putrik; I. J. Kant; H. Hoofs; R. Reijs; M. J. Jansen – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2024
Background: Early school dropout is an economic, social, and individual problem. School dropout is a result of cumulative processes that occur over many childhood years. Despite the influence of level of education on health outcomes, primary prevention of dropout outside of the school setting is rare. In the Netherlands, the Youth Health Care…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Youth, Dropouts, Prediction
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Abby K. Hodges; Phillip S. Strain; Garrett J. Roberts – Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions, 2024
A single-case multiple baseline design across three families was used to evaluate the impact of a manualized Prevent-Teach-Reinforce for Families (PTR-F) process for addressing challenging behavior (CB) when delivered in a remote format (PTR-F: R). Results across three U.S. families showed that (a) a functional relation existed between parent…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Behavior Problems, Behavior Modification, Parent Role
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Sihong Liu; Tiffany Phu; Amy Dominguez; Eliana Hurwich-Reiss; Drew McGee; Sarah Watamura; Philip Fisher – Prevention Science, 2025
Many existing preventive intervention programs focus on promoting responsive parenting practices. However, these parenting programs are often long in duration and expensive, and meta-analytic evidence indicates that families facing high levels of adversity typically benefit less. Moreover, due to a lack of specification and evaluation of…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Caregiver Child Relationship, Self Efficacy, Child Behavior
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Antonio A. Morgan-López; Lissette M. Saavedra; Heather L. McDaniel; Stephen G. West; Nicholas S. Ialongo; Catherine P. Bradshaw; Alexandra T. Tonigan; Barrett W. Montgomery; Nicole P. Powell; Lixin Qu; Anna C. Yaros; John E. Lochman – Grantee Submission, 2024
Coping Power (CP) is a preventive intervention that focuses on reducing child externalizing problems. Although it is typically delivered in a group format (GCP), individually-delivered CP (ICP) has produced greater mean reductions in externalizing problems. However, standard analysis of randomized trials loses individual-level information…
Descriptors: Coping, Prevention, Intervention, Child Behavior
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George McCabe; Jennifer W. Godwin; W. Andrew Rothenberg; Natalie Goulter; Jennifer E. Lansford; Karen L. Bierman; John D. Coie; D. Max Crowley; Kenneth A. Dodge; Mark T. Greenberg; John E. Lochman; Robert J. McMahon; Ellen E. Pinderhughes – Prevention Science, 2025
Early preventive interventions can improve outcomes in childhood, but the most effective interventions can continue to deliver benefits through the life course. The Fast Track intervention, a randomized controlled trial for children at risk of conduct problems, has lowered psychopathology, substance use problems, and criminality and elevated…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Prevention, Randomized Controlled Trials, Child Behavior
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Jessica Prioletta – McGill Journal of Education, 2024
The purpose of this article is to examine how the discourse of childhood innocence masks the ways in which sexual violence by boys against girls is perpetrated in kindergarten. Findings from a year-long ethnographic study conducted in two Canadian kindergarten classrooms show that narrow understandings of gender and sexuality in childhood obscure…
Descriptors: Sexual Abuse, Violence, Males, Young Children
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Shixu Yan; Zhiyi Liu; Peng Peng; Ni Yan – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
Externalizing behavior and low academic performance present key developmental challenges for school-age children, with the potential for these domains to predict each other over time, leading to worsened outcomes. Yet, previous studies have yielded inconsistent conclusions about the directional pathways between externalizing behaviors and academic…
Descriptors: Child Behavior, Academic Achievement, Attention Control, Behavior Problems
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Shuyi Zhai; Ruhan Ding; Mowei Shen; Jie He – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Behavioral inhibition (BI) is an early-appearing temperamental trait characterized by intense negative affect and withdrawal behaviors to novel and challenging situations. Inhibited children are more likely to display social withdrawal and experience an increased risk for internalizing problems. Trait inference, the way children interpret…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Individual Differences, Withdrawal (Psychology), At Risk Persons
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Yoke Y. Chen; Chuong H. Ting; Siti R. Ghazali; Ang A. Ling – Psychology in the Schools, 2024
With the increasing prevalence of mental health issues among children, there is a growing need to implement school-based preventive programs for emotional well-being in Malaysia. Super Skills for Life (SSL) is a transdiagnostic preventive program designed based on the cognitive-behavioral therapy concept to address emotional problems among…
Descriptors: Well Being, Foreign Countries, Intervention, Self Control