| Literature DB >> 30208956 |
Susan Andersen1, Morten Hulvej Rod2, Teresa Holmberg3, Liselotte Ingholt3, Annette Kjær Ersbøll3, Janne Schurmann Tolstrup3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lack of formal education is an important social determinant of health inequality and represents a public health problem. School dropout is particularly common in vocational education; however few prevention programs targeting dropout in the vocational school setting have been evaluated. The purpose of the present study was to test the effect on school dropout of a settings-based intervention program (named Shaping the Social) that targeted the school organization in order to create social and supportive learning environments.Entities:
Keywords: Prevention; Settings-based intervention; Social environment; Student dropouts; Wellbeing
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30208956 PMCID: PMC6134754 DOI: 10.1186/s40359-018-0258-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychol ISSN: 2050-7283
Fig. 1Flow diagram of Shaping the Social. #Dropped out of school before the 10-week survey
Baseline characteristics of the student populationa (N = 10,190) by intervention and control
| Intervention | Control | |
|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | |
| Age (years), mean ± SD | 21.8 ± 6.3 | 21.5 ± 5.6 |
| Men, n (%) | 2928 (77) | 5357 (84) |
| Non-western ethnicity, n (%) | 206 (5.4) | 840 (13) |
| Living with parents, n (%) | 2106 (56) | 3567 (56) |
| Parental income, n (%) | ||
| 1 Lowest | 306 (8.3) | 592 (9.6) |
| 2 | 645 (18) | 1004 (16) |
| 3 | 830 (23) | 1350 (22) |
| 4 | 1021 (28) | 1530 (25) |
| 5 Highest | 873 (24) | 1679 (27) |
| Parental education, n (%) | ||
| High | 1022 (28) | 1939 (32) |
| Medium | 1973 (54) | 3058 (50) |
| Low | 648 (18) | 1072 (18) |
| Prior school dropout, n (%) | 1128 (30) | 1856 (29) |
aAll students who were enrolled at technical or agricultural departments at 4 intervention schools and 6 control schools
Fig. 2Effect of Shaping the Social on school dropout within 2 years (n = 10,190). Adjusted for baseline age, gender, ethnicity, parental income, prior school dropout, type of basic course and teams (random effect)
Intervention effect on mediators, mediators’ effect on dropout, and intervention effect on dropout through mediators (N = 2396)
| Intervention effect on mediator | Mediator effect on dropout | Intervention effect on dropout through mediator | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean difference (95% CI)a | OR (95% CI)ab | OR (95% CI)a | |
| School connectedness | 0.22 (0.09, 0.35)** | 0.84 (0.79, 0.89)*** | 0.92 (0.85, 0.99)* |
| Student support | 0.19 (− 0.07, 0.44) | 0.95 (0.93, 0.98)** | 0.95 (0.88, 1.03) |
| Teacher relatedness | 0.07 (− 0.10, 0.24) | 0.91 (0.87, 0.95)*** | 0.96 (0.88, 1.03) |
| Valuing the profession | 0.17 (0.02, 0.31)* | 0.82 (0.78, 0.87)*** | 0.95 (0.88, 1.03) |
* p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001
aAdjusted for baseline age, sex, ethnicity, parental income, prior school dropout, life satisfaction, academic self-efficacy, apprenticeship agreement
bAdjusted for intervention condition
Fig. 3School connectedness as a mediator of the intervention effect on school dropout (n = 2396). The two solid arrows represent the indirect effect of the intervention on school dropout through school connectedness, and the dashed arrow represents the direct effect after adjustment of school connectedness. a The school connectedness score was 0.22 units higher in intervention group compared to control group. b For one unit increase in school connectedness score the odds ratio for dropout was 0.84. The odds ratio for intervention effect on dropout through school connectedness was 0.92 (95% CI: 0.85, 0.99), p = 0.032 (indirect effect; see Table 2). c There was no intervention effect that did not go through school connectedness (OR = 0.99, 95% CI: 0.82-1.24)
Teacher-reported implementation degree
| Number of classes | Implemented, | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| A preliminary meeting was held | 73 | 63 (86%) |
| Relatives invited | 62 | 56 (90%) |
| Guided tour around the school’s facilities | 63 | 36 (57%) |
| Gathered in educational tracks | 51 | 40 (78%) |
|
| ||
| Classroom prepared for a festive reception | 72 | 70 (97%) |
| Welcome speech | 72 | 59 (82%) |
| A round of person-to-person introductions | 72 | 57 (79%) |
| Students work in groups on an assignment relevant to the education | 72 | 45 (63%) |
| Display of products of former students | 72 | 46 (64%) |
| Presentation of the curriculum and course content | 71 | 69 (97%) |
| Plan for the day, so others can take over | 72 | 57 (79%) |
|
| ||
| Clear description of time | 72 | 67 (93%) |
| Clear description of classrooms’ location | 72 | 62 (86%) |
|
| ||
| Class meetings (number of days per week): | ||
| 5 | 72 | 26 (36%) |
| 4 | 72 | 7 (10%) |
| 3 | 72 | 10 (14%) |
| 2 | 72 | 6 (8%) |
| 1 | 72 | 10 (14%) |
| 0 | 72 | 13 (18%) |
| Beverage or food served | 59 | 29 (49%) |
|
| ||
| Entire class taking breaks at the same time and smoke breaks not allowed | 72 | 27 (38%) |
|
| ||
| Existence of a pleasant non-smoking place (e.g. table football) | 72 | 43 (60%) |
Table reproduced from published article regarding proximal effects [28]