Adolescent Family Life Research Awards - FY 2003Reducing the Risk of Early Sex in Single Mother Families
University of Arizona Family and Consumer Sciences 1110 E. South Campus Drive, Room 210 Tucson, AZ 85721 Principal Investigator: Bonnie L. Barber, Ph.D. Project Period: 9/30/03 - 9/29/05
This project will develop an empirical foundation for recommending a set of parenting practices to target in prevention interventions with single-parent families. Longitudinal data on parenting practices in early adolescence will be analyzed: 1) to test a conceptual model to predict early initiation of sexual activity; 2) to consider "packages" of parenting practices that collectively predict a delay in first sexual intercourse; and 3) to study the adolescent for whom the models fail to predict sexual behavior outcome. The conceptual model to be used predicts that parents influence the development of their adolescents' sexual behavior choices by communicating their perceptions of the child's capabilities and expectations for behavior and achievement, by providing specific experiences for the child, by modeling involvement in sexual relationships, through discipline style and monitoring, and by the general social- emotional climate they provide.
Adolescent Fathers' Involvement Intervention
Temple University School of Social Work 1301 Cecil B. Moore Ave, RA 555 Philadelphia, PA 19122 Principal Investigator: Jay S. Fagan, D.S.W. Project Period: 9/30/03 - 9/29/06
This project will target the male partners of pregnant female adolescents in seeking to promote meaningful father involvement once the child is born. Two hundred expectant adolescent couples (65 percent African American and 35 percent Latino) will be recruited at the Temple University OB/GYN clinic. The young fathers will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups: positive co-parenting (MELD for Young Dads program) or prenatal and child development class. Fathers and adolescent mothers will participate in a pretest, posttest, and follow-up when the child is three months of age. The expected outcomes are improved co-parenting relationships, increased father involvement both before birth and when the child is three months of age, greater employment success and educational expectations, and improved parenting abilities.
Parental Involvement in Teen Risk Avoidance
Baylor University Department of Marketing P.O. Box 98007 Waco, TX 76798 Principal Investigator: John F. Tanner, Ph.D. Project Period: 9/30/03 - 9/29/04
This project will utilize focus groups to inform program recruiters of the appropriate message content needed to reach various segments of the parent population. Data from these focus groups will be employed to form media messages which will be tested and used to recruit parent participants in an abstinence education program. In addition, through the use of parental style surveys and matching parents' surveys with those of their children to measure parental style impact on teen attitudes and behaviors, this project will determine which parental style segment(s) should be targeted. Finally, by offering varied incentives either before or after the parent programs, the study will further demonstrate the impact of incentives on the participation of parents in an abstinence program.
Resilience Among Adolescent Mothers and Children Age 7
University of Maryland, Baltimore Dept. of Pediatrics 655 West Lombard Street, Suite 311 Baltimore, MD 21201 Principal Investigator: Maureen Black, Ph.D. Project Period: 9/30/03 - 9/29/06
The proposed project will examine resilience in young mothers and their 7 year-old children by extending an ongoing evaluation of a randomized trial of home visitation designed to promote parenting and family processes among three- generation households. This will entail of an evaluation of the young mothers, children, fathers, and grandmothers in the Three Generation Project. The primary aims of the project are: 1) to examine resilience among young mothers who entered parenthood as adolescents and among their 7-year old children; 2) to examine how patterns of risk factors and personal resources identified during the first two years of parenting influence resilience among mothers and children at age 7; 3) to examine how concurrent family interaction patterns are related to resilience among mothers and children at age 7; and 4) to examine how an intervention delivered in the first year of life targeting parenting and family processes impacts resilience among mothers and children.
Do As I Say Not As I Do: Parental Monitoring and Teen Sexual Risk
West Virginia University Research Corp. Department of Pediatrics Medical Center Drive Morgantown, WV 26506 Principal Investigator: Lesley Cottrell, Ph.D. Project Period: 09/30/2003- 09/29/2006
The goal of the proposed project is to examine the current model of parental monitoring by introducing a new variable, parental monitoring behavior, or the behaviors parents engage in to confirm their adolescent's activities. This model will be evaluated through the development, implementation, and analysis of a comprehensive parental monitoring measure during the first year of the project. Another goal of the project will be to utilize the results from the evaluated measure to modify an existing parent-adolescent program. Program modifications will be made in an attempt to sustain the effects of the program in improving parental monitoring/knowledge, parent-adolescent communication about sexual issues and reducing adolescent involvement in sexual risk behaviors. The final goal of this project will be to implement and evaluate the modified parent-adolescent program using a randomized controlled trial and follow up assessment schedule.
An Experiential Teenage Pregnancy Prevention Experiment
Wayne State University College of Education, Rm. 345 Detroit, MI 48202 Principal Investigator: Cheryl Somers, Ph.D. Project Period: 9/30/2003-9/29/2005
"Baby Think It Over" (BTIO) is an approach to pregnancy prevention that allows teenagers to temporarily care for a baby in the form of a life-like infant similator in order to provide an idea of the responsibility involved with becoming a parent. The aim of the proposed project is to conduct a rigorously designed research examination of the impact of this program. The specific objectives of the proposed study are to 1) experimentally study whether teens who receive the BTIO intervention evidence desired behavioral and attitudinal change not evidenced by a comparison group; 2) examine potential differences in the impact on each gender; and 3) across ethnic and geographic groups, to determine for whom the program may or may not be effective.
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