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Improving Family Well-Being and Child School Readiness: Power PATH Dual Generation Intervention

Phase 2
Conditions
Head Start as Usual
Power PATH
Interventions
Other: Head Start as usual
Behavioral: Power PATH
Registration Number
NCT02176590
Lead Sponsor
University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
Brief Summary

This project will test the proximal and distal effects of an integrated dual-generation intervention, Power PATH, in Head Start preschoolers and their parents in Alabama.

Detailed Description

This project will test the proximal and distal effects of an integrated dual-generation intervention approach, Power PATH, in an existing Head Start University Partnership in Alabama. Dual generation approaches recognize the need to intervene with both parents and children in Head Start preschools, in order to improve parents' ability to provide safe and supportive caregiving environments and to prepare children for the transition to elementary school academically and behaviorally. Parents of Head Start preschoolers often have high levels of poverty, stress, and mental health needs (Yoshikowa, Aber, \& Beardslee, 2012) and their children are at-risk for academic, behavioral, and social-emotional difficulties (Aber, Jones, \& Cohen, 2000; Costello, Keeler, \& Angold, 2001; Morales \& Guerra, 2006). Thus, in this project, two evidence-based and widely-utilized preventive interventions will be adapted and thoughtfully integrated, in collabo-ration with Head Start personnel, to provide intensive, high quality services to Head Start parents and children. First, the Power PATH Parent Intervention program, adapted from Coping Power (Wells, Lochman \& Lenhart, 2008) for this dual-generation approach, will be implemented to address parental mental health needs, to increase parental employment and financial security, and to improve parents' ability to model effective social-emotional skills. The parent intervention will help parents create a positive and predictable home environment, and support their child's academic learning and emotional and behavioral self-regulation. Second, the Promoting Alterna-tive Thinking Strategies (PATHS) Preschool Social and Emotional Learning curriculum (Domitrovich et al., 1999) will be implemented in the preschool classrooms. PATHS is a universal, classroom-based curriculum that increases children's social-emotional competence and self-regulatory skills, leading to long-term social, behavioral and academic gains. The Power PATH program will incorporate both of these parent and child interventions, and will include opportuni-ties for the children to teach their parents the social and emotional skills they are learning in the classroom, to promote skill- generalization and transfer to the home environment. This study will also identify novel intervention mediators and moderators, essential for interrupting the intergen-erational transmission of chronic social stress, and will identify the best interventions for families, particularly during preschool when self-regulation skills are still malleable, and children's primary environments and physiological responses to stress are likely to moderate intervention effects (Bierman et al., 2008; Boyce \& Ellis, 2005; Porges, 2007). In summary, addressing sources of chronic stress in the parents of Head Start preschoolers (i.e., employment and financial insecurity, mental health needs, and family stressors) through the Power PATH dual generation intervention is expected to prepare parents to better support, shape and model their children's self-regulation skills and to better foster their children's school readiness, and to improve overall family well-being.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
540
Inclusion Criteria
  • 4 year old preschool students in participating Head Start centers/classrooms in West Central Alabama, and their parents and teachers
Exclusion Criteria
  • Severe developmental delay (making the student unable to complete the primary study measures)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Head Start as usualHead Start as usualHead Start as usual (will measure the effects of Head Start programming as usual on the primary outcomes)
Power PATHPower PATHClassroom PATHS Social Emotional Learning Curriculum (for preschool classrooms) plus Coping Power parent intervention (teaches parents what children are learning in the classroom PATHS program and also provides parents with mental health intervention and parenting topics to promote family well-being)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Child School ReadinessOne year (repeated through 1st grade)

Indicators of child school readiness (Behavior, Executive Functioning, Emotional Regulation, Pre-Reading skills) will be assessed at the end of preschool.

Family Well-beingOne Year (repeated through 1st grade)

Indicators of Family Well-Being will be measured at the end of preschool (Parental stress, parenting, parental depression, economic and financial security, family environment)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Alabama

🇺🇸

Tuscaloosa, Alabama, United States

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