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A Randomized Controlled Trial Evaluation of an After-School Prosocial Behavior Program in an Area of Socioeconomic Disadvantage

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A Randomized Controlled Trial Evaluation of an After-School Prosocial Behavior Program in an Area of Socioeconomic Disadvantage. / O'Hare, Liam; Biggart, Andy; Kerr, Karen et al.
In: Elementary School Journal, Vol. 116, No. 1, 01.09.2015, p. 1-29.

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O'Hare L, Biggart A, Kerr K, Connolly P. A Randomized Controlled Trial Evaluation of an After-School Prosocial Behavior Program in an Area of Socioeconomic Disadvantage. Elementary School Journal. 2015 Sept 1;116(1):1-29. doi: 10.1086/683102

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O'Hare, Liam ; Biggart, Andy ; Kerr, Karen et al. / A Randomized Controlled Trial Evaluation of an After-School Prosocial Behavior Program in an Area of Socioeconomic Disadvantage. In: Elementary School Journal. 2015 ; Vol. 116, No. 1. pp. 1-29.

Bibtex

@article{aab6165e910d4afc84ab62b052913d7b,
title = "A Randomized Controlled Trial Evaluation of an After-School Prosocial Behavior Program in an Area of Socioeconomic Disadvantage",
abstract = "A randomized controlled trial was used to evaluate the effects of a prosocial behavior after-school program called Mate-Tricks for 9- and 10-year-old children and their parents living in an area of significant socioeconomic disadvantage. The children were randomly assigned to an intervention (n = 220) or a control group (n = 198). Children were compared on measures of prosocial behavior, antisocial behavior, and related outcome measures. The trial found adverse effects on four outcomes among the intervention group compared to the control group: antisocial behavior increased on two different measures (d = 0.20) and (d = 0.18), child-reported liberal parenting increased (d = 0.16), and child reported authoritarian parenting also increased (d = 0.20). In addition, parental participation was significantly associated with several program outcomes. It was concluded, that group based after-school behavior programs may have the potential to cause iatrogenic effects and must be designed, piloted, evaluated and implemented with a high degree of care.",
author = "Liam O'Hare and Andy Biggart and Karen Kerr and Paul Connolly",
year = "2015",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1086/683102",
language = "English",
volume = "116",
pages = "1--29",
journal = "Elementary School Journal",
issn = "0013-5984",
publisher = "University of Chicago",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Randomized Controlled Trial Evaluation of an After-School Prosocial Behavior Program in an Area of Socioeconomic Disadvantage

AU - O'Hare, Liam

AU - Biggart, Andy

AU - Kerr, Karen

AU - Connolly, Paul

PY - 2015/9/1

Y1 - 2015/9/1

N2 - A randomized controlled trial was used to evaluate the effects of a prosocial behavior after-school program called Mate-Tricks for 9- and 10-year-old children and their parents living in an area of significant socioeconomic disadvantage. The children were randomly assigned to an intervention (n = 220) or a control group (n = 198). Children were compared on measures of prosocial behavior, antisocial behavior, and related outcome measures. The trial found adverse effects on four outcomes among the intervention group compared to the control group: antisocial behavior increased on two different measures (d = 0.20) and (d = 0.18), child-reported liberal parenting increased (d = 0.16), and child reported authoritarian parenting also increased (d = 0.20). In addition, parental participation was significantly associated with several program outcomes. It was concluded, that group based after-school behavior programs may have the potential to cause iatrogenic effects and must be designed, piloted, evaluated and implemented with a high degree of care.

AB - A randomized controlled trial was used to evaluate the effects of a prosocial behavior after-school program called Mate-Tricks for 9- and 10-year-old children and their parents living in an area of significant socioeconomic disadvantage. The children were randomly assigned to an intervention (n = 220) or a control group (n = 198). Children were compared on measures of prosocial behavior, antisocial behavior, and related outcome measures. The trial found adverse effects on four outcomes among the intervention group compared to the control group: antisocial behavior increased on two different measures (d = 0.20) and (d = 0.18), child-reported liberal parenting increased (d = 0.16), and child reported authoritarian parenting also increased (d = 0.20). In addition, parental participation was significantly associated with several program outcomes. It was concluded, that group based after-school behavior programs may have the potential to cause iatrogenic effects and must be designed, piloted, evaluated and implemented with a high degree of care.

U2 - 10.1086/683102

DO - 10.1086/683102

M3 - Journal article

VL - 116

SP - 1

EP - 29

JO - Elementary School Journal

JF - Elementary School Journal

SN - 0013-5984

IS - 1

ER -