对 "周五夜现场 "辅导计划支持青少年积极发展成果的评估。

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Kathleen P Tebb, Ketan Tamirisa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:酗酒、吸烟和使用其他毒品(ATOD)是导致青少年可预防的发病率和死亡率的主要原因。虽然传统的干预措施针对的是特定的健康风险行为(如药物使用、开始性交、逃学等),但有证据表明,采用积极青少年发展(PYD)框架可能会对多个领域产生积极影响。周五夜现场指导(FNLM)是一项基于PYD的跨年龄同伴指导计划,该计划让高年级的高中适龄青少年组成小组,以结构化、持续性、一对一的关系指导初中适龄青少年小组。虽然有研究表明,由成人导师与青少年被辅导者配对开展的代际青少年辅导计划效果显著但规模较小,但有关跨年龄辅导计划的研究却十分有限。本研究的目的是评估 FNLM 在提高参与者的知识、态度、技能、发展关爱关系的机会、学校参与度和学习成绩方面的能力:方法: 对加利福尼亚州 13 个县的 FNLM 参与者进行了一项事后回顾调查。参与者对自己对反毒品的认识和态度、技能、与同伴和成年人的关系以及学业指标进行了评分。开放式问题收集了参与者在 FNLM 中的经历。使用非参数相关样本 Wilcoxon 符号秩检验(配对 t 检验的替代方法)来比较前后差异。还向参与者提出了两个开放式问题:"FNLM 最好的部分是什么?"和 "如果有的话,你会改变什么?"。对每个问题的回答都进行了审查、编码,并根据关键主题进行了分析:共有 512 名参与者完成了调查(287 名指导者和 225 名受训者)。指导者和受训者在所有项目上都取得了微小但具有统计学意义的进步。定性分析显示,大多数指导者和受训者都特别喜欢相互了解和相处。一些指导者补充说,能够对受训者的生活产生积极的影响或带来积极的变化是一件很有意义的事情。许多青少年表示,所建立的关系(尤其是与伙伴建立的关系)和活动是 FNLM 的最大亮点。绝大多数人都不会改变该计划的任何内容。那些对计划提出改进建议的人则建议开展更多的活动,或开展更多动手和参与性更强的活动,以及举行更多或更长时间的会议:FNLM 积极吸引青少年参与,为他们提供支持和机会,促进知识、技能发展、积极的人际关系、学业参与和成功,并提高他们对使用酒精、烟草和其他毒品(ATOD)可能造成的危害的认识。在参与计划之前,青少年使用酒精、烟草和其他毒品(ATOD)的比例较低,而在参与计划之后,这一比例明显降低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Evaluation of the Friday Night Live Mentoring Program on Supporting Positive Youth Development Outcomes.

Introduction: The use of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs (ATOD) is a leading cause of preventable morbidity and mortality among adolescents. While traditional interventions have targeted specific health-risk behaviors (e.g., substance use, initiation of sexual intercourse, truancy, etc.), the evidence suggests that using a positive youth development (PYD) framework may have positive impacts across a number of domains. Friday Night Live Mentoring (FNLM) is a PYD-based, cross-age peer mentoring program that engages teams of older high school-aged youth to mentor teams of middle school-aged youth in a structured, ongoing, one-on-one relationship. While studies have demonstrated significant but small effect sizes of intergenerational youth mentoring programs in which an adult mentor is paired with the youth mentee, research on cross-age mentoring programs is limited. The purpose of the current study is to evaluate FNLM on its ability to improve participants' knowledge, attitudes, skills, opportunities to develop caring relationships, school engagement, and academic performance.

Methods: A retrospective, pre-post survey was administered online to FNLM participants across 13 California counties. Participants rated their knowledge and attitudes about ATOD, skills, relationships with peers and adults, and academic indicators. Open-ended questions gathered information about participants' experiences in FNLM. Non-parametric related-samples Wilcoxon signed rank tests (an alternative to paired t-test) were used to compare pre-post differences. Participants were also asked two open-ended questions: "What are the best parts of FNLM?" and "What, if anything, would you change?". The responses to each question were reviewed, coded, and analyzed according to key themes.

Results: A total of 512 participants completed the survey (287 mentors and 225 protégés). There were small but statistically significant improvements across all items for both mentors and protégés. Qualitative analyses showed that most mentors and protégés especially enjoyed getting to know and spend time with one another. Several mentors added that it was rewarding to be a positive influence on or to make a positive difference in the protégé's life. Many youth stated that the relationships formed, especially with their partner, and the activities were the best part of FNLM. The overwhelming majority would not change anything about the program. Those who provided recommendations for program improvement suggested more activities or more hands-on and engaging activities and more or longer meetings.

Conclusion: FNLM actively engages youth and provides them with support and opportunities that promote knowledge, skill development, positive relationships, academic engagement, and success and raise awareness of the harms that the use of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs (ATOD) can cause. While ATOD use was low prior to program participation, it was significantly lower after participating in the program.

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来源期刊
Healthcare
Healthcare Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
7.10%
发文量
0
审稿时长
47 days
期刊介绍: Healthcare (ISSN 2227-9032) is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal (free for readers), which publishes original theoretical and empirical work in the interdisciplinary area of all aspects of medicine and health care research. Healthcare publishes Original Research Articles, Reviews, Case Reports, Research Notes and Short Communications. We encourage researchers to publish their experimental and theoretical results in as much detail as possible. For theoretical papers, full details of proofs must be provided so that the results can be checked; for experimental papers, full experimental details must be provided so that the results can be reproduced. Additionally, electronic files or software regarding the full details of the calculations, experimental procedure, etc., can be deposited along with the publication as “Supplementary Material”.
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