School Climate and Implementation of a Preventive Intervention

Tallennettuna:
Bibliografiset tiedot
Julkaisussa:American Journal of Community Psychology vol. 40, no. 3-4 (Dec 2007), p. 250-260
Päätekijä: Gregory, Anne
Yhteisötekijä: The Metropolitan Area Child Study Research Group
Muut tekijät: Henry, David B, Schoeny, Michael E
Julkaistu:
Blackwell Science Ltd.
Aiheet:
Linkit:Citation/Abstract
Full Text - PDF
Tagit: Lisää tagi
Ei tageja, Lisää ensimmäinen tagi!
Kuvaus
Abstrakti:Although there has been wide dissemination of research-based psychosocial prevention programs, a similarly strong research base to guide program implementation has been lacking. Program implementation has been particularly difficult for schools, due partly to insufficient understanding of how school ecologies interact with these programs. This study examined the effects of multiple dimensions of school climate on level and rate of change in implementation of a violence prevention intervention across three school years. Using multi-level modeling, the study found that teacher-reported support between staff and among teachers and students predicted higher average levels of implementation. Teacher-reported administrative leadership predicted greater growth in implementation across 3 years. Findings offer implications for an ecological model of program implementation that considers school-level contextual effects on adoption and sustainability of new programs in schools. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]   Although there has been wide dissemination of research-based psychosocial prevention programs, a similarly strong research base to guide program implementation has been lacking. Program implementation has been particularly difficult for schools, due partly to insufficient understanding of how school ecologies interact with these programs. This study examined the effects of multiple dimensions of school climate on level and rate of change in implementation of a violence prevention intervention across three school years. Using multi-level modeling, the study found that teacher-reported support between staff and among teachers and students predicted higher average levels of implementation. Teacher-reported administrative leadership predicted greater growth in implementation across 3 years. Findings offer implications for an ecological model of program implementation that considers school-level contextual effects on adoption and sustainability of new programs in schools.
ISSN:0091-0562
1573-2770
DOI:10.1007/s10464-007-9142-z
Lähde:Science Database