| Literature DB >> 26377235 |
Dawn DeLay1, Thao Ha2, Mark Van Ryzin3, Charlotte Winter4, Thomas J Dishion5.
Abstract
Adolescent friendships that promote problem behavior are often chosen in middle school. The current study examines the unintended impact of a randomized school-based intervention on the selection of friends in middle school, as well as on observations of deviant talk with friends 5 years later. Participants included 998 middle school students (526 boys and 472 girls) recruited at the onset of middle school (age 11-12 years) from three public middle schools participating in the Family Check-up model intervention. The current study focuses only on the effects of the SHAPe curriculum-one level of the Family Check-up model-on friendship choices. Participants nominated friends and completed measures of deviant peer affiliation. Approximately half of the sample (n = 500) was randomly assigned to the intervention, and the other half (n = 498) comprised the control group within each school. The results indicate that the SHAPe curriculum affected friend selection within school 1 but not within schools 2 or 3. The effects of friend selection in school 1 translated into reductions in observed deviancy training 5 years later (age 16-17 years). By coupling longitudinal social network analysis with a randomized intervention study, the current findings provide initial evidence that a randomized public middle school intervention can disrupt the formation of deviant peer groups and diminish levels of adolescent deviance 5 years later.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescence; Deviancy training; Deviant peers; Friend selection; Intervention effects
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26377235 PMCID: PMC4791197 DOI: 10.1007/s11121-015-0605-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Sci ISSN: 1389-4986