| Literature DB >> 30244206 |
G J Melendez-Torres1, Tara Tancred2, Adam Fletcher3, Rona Campbell4, James Thomas5, Christopher Bonell2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To systematically review evidence on the effectiveness of interventions including integration of academic and health education for reducing physical aggression and violence, and describe the content of these interventions. DATA SOURCES: Between November and December 2015, we searched 19 databases and 32 websites and consulted key experts in the field. We updated our search in February 2018. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: We included randomised trials of school-based interventions integrating academic and health education in students aged 4-18 and not targeted at health-related subpopulations (eg, learning or developmental difficulties). We included evaluations reporting a measure of interpersonal violence or aggression. DATA EXTRACTION AND ANALYSIS: Data were extracted independently in duplicate, interventions were analysed to understand similarities and differences and outcomes were narratively synthesised by key stage (KS).Entities:
Keywords: community child health; systematic review; violence
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30244206 PMCID: PMC6157571 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-020793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flowchart.
Characteristics of included studies
| Evaluation, setting and studies | Sample characteristics | Intervention description | Control description |
| Bullying Literature Project | Four classrooms, 95 teacher reports, 90 students (IG); three classrooms, 55 teacher reports, 42 students (CG) | This intervention aims to reduce bullying by introducing themes related to bullying through children’s literature. It also provides an opportunity for children to role model practical skills to address or avoid bullying. The Bullying Literature Project integrates themes related to bullying into the children’s literature used within a standard English curriculum. Students then had the opportunity to practice and reinforce skills via writing activities. The intervention was delivered by school psychologists supervised by the PI and lasted over 5 weeks in one school term. Additionally, the version including moral disengagement discussed the role of moral disengagement in each lesson as well. | Waitlist control |
| Bullying Literature Project—Moral Disengagement | Two classrooms, 42 students (IG); 2 classrooms, 42 students (CG) | Waitlist control | |
| Gatehouse | Two districts, 12 schools, 1335 students (IG); two districts, 14 schools, 1343 students (CG) | Through teaching a curriculum (including integration of cognitive behavioural principles in English classes) and establishing a school-wide adolescent health team, Gatehouse aims to: build a sense of security and trust in students; enhance skills and opportunities for good communication; and build a sense of positive regard through participation in school life. The intervention was delivered by teachers over the course of 2 school years, supported by the school-wide adolescent health team and by external consultants who themselves were experienced teachers. Integration was achieved by using English classes to convey cognitive behavioural techniques for self-management, including via a ‘critical literacy’ approach that uses poetry, literature, song, film and visual materials. | Education as usual |
| Learning to Read in a Healing Classroom | 20 districts, 33 schools (IG); 19 districts, 30 schools (CG); 3857 students overall | The intervention is delivered over the course of a year and is designed for use in postconflict reconstruction areas. Teachers are supported to integrate social–emotional learning in literacy lessons, supported by a bank of lesson plans relating to reading and writing. Teachers additionally received substantial professional development, including ‘teacher learning circles’, and developed strategies to improve the learning environment. | Waitlist control |
| Linking the Interests of Families and Teachers (LIFT) | Three schools, 214 students (IG); three schools, 147 students (CG) | Classroom instruction and discussion on specific social and problem-solving skills followed by skills practice, reinforced during free play using a group cooperation game with review of behaviour and presentation of daily rewards. There is also a parent evening to engage families and opportunities for parents to engage with teachers. The intervention was delivered by teachers and special instructors. Integration was achieved by teaching study skills alongside social–emotional education content, and was delivered over the course of 1 school year. | Education as usual |
| Positive Action Chicago | Seven schools,~240 students (IG); seven schools,~260 students (CG) | Teachers provide lessons covering six units: self-concept; positive actions for mind and body; positive social–emotional actions; managing oneself; being honest with oneself; and continually improving oneself. Content includes 140 lessons per grade per year from years 1 to 13. In addition, an implementation coordinator and school climate team are appointed to support the intervention. The intervention is primarily delivered by teachers and school staff; in both trials, this was supported by extensive professional development and training. Integration was achieved by linking academic learning to social–emotional and health-related learning, for example, by including content on problem solving and study skills alongside positive actions for mind and body, and by encouraging teachers to reflect Positive Action content in academic lessons. | Education as usual |
| Positive Action Hawaii | 10 schools, 976 students (IG); 10 schools, 738 students (CG) | Education as usual | |
| Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies (PATHS) | Seven schools, 422 students (IG); seven schools, 357 students (CG) | An intervention to reduce conflict by improving students’ social–emotional and thinking skills through a curriculum (including study skills), the establishment of a positive classroom environment and generalised positive social norms throughout the school environment. Lessons are grouped into three units addressing readiness and self-control, feelings and relationships and interpersonal problem solving. These units cover five domains: (1) self-control; (2) emotional understanding; (3) positive self-esteem; (4) healthy relationships; and (5) interpersonal problem-solving skills. The intervention is delivered by teachers supported by consultants, with 131 lessons delivered over 3 years (two to three times per week, 20 to 30 min each). Integration was achieved by linking study skills to social–emotional learning, by supporting teachers to include children’s literature in reinforcing concepts, and by providing ideas to link PATHS to English, social studies and history lessons. | Education as usual |
| Reading, Writing, Respect and Reconciliation (4Rs) | Nine schools, 515 students (IG); nine schools, 427 students (CG) | This intervention includes two components: (1) a seven-unit, 21–35 lesson literacy-based curriculum in conflict resolution and social–emotional learning for children in primary school (from year 1 to year 6); and (2) intensive professional development for teachers. The intervention was delivered by teachers after this extensive professional development. Integration was achieved by using literature as a springboard to help students understand anger and develop skills in listening, cooperation, assertiveness and negotiation. | Education as usual |
| Second Step | 18 schools, 1940 students (IG); 18 schools, 1676 students (CG) | This intervention includes 15 weeks of classroom lessons taught weekly or every 2 weeks throughout the school year for 3 years. Teachers are supported by professional development training to deliver intervention content, which includes bullying, problem-solving, emotional regulation and empathy, alongside videos. Teachers also receive plans to support integration of Second Step content into academic lessons. Modelling, role play and coaching are included in the intervention. Students receive homework to reinforce skills, and use group and collaborative work to practice skills. | Education as usual, with additional bullying resources |
| Steps to Respect I | Three schools (IG), three schools (CG); 1126 students total | This is an antibullying intervention with both school-wide and classroom components. The school-wide components create new disciplinary policies for bullying and improve monitoring of and intervention in bullying. Classroom curricula teach positive social norms and improve social–emotional skills for better engagement with bullying. The intervention was delivered by classroom teachers alongside school-wide bullying policy teams. Biweekly lessons in the Steps to Respect curriculum are supported by 8–10 literature-based lessons presented over a 12–14-week period. This intervention integrates academic and health education by developing literacy skills alongside furthering understanding of the Steps to Respect curricular themes. | Waitlist control |
| Steps to Respect II | 17 schools (IG), 16 schools (CG); 2940 students total | Waitlist control | |
| Youth Matters | 14 schools, 702 students (IG), 14 schools, 462 students (CG) | Youth Matters promotes the development of healthy relationships and social competency and the development of social resistance. Classroom discussions around social issues promote positive social norms. Over four modules with 10 lessons, delivered over 2 years, students read age-appropriate stories, receive social–emotional learning and practice skills. The intervention was delivered by educational specialists from outside the school. Integration was achieved by using 30–40-page stories in each module intended to support schools in meeting academic standards in academic and health education. | Education as usual |
IG, intervention group; CG, control group; SES, social-economic status; PI, principal investigator
Appraisal of included studies
| Intervention name | Random generation of allocation sequence | Concealed allocation | Blinding | Complete outcome data | Reporting not selective | Controlled for confounding | Accounted for clustering | Reduced other forms of bias | Suitable control group |
| Bullying Literature Project | NC | NS | NS | Yes | NC | NC | NS | NS | NC |
| Bullying Literature Project—Moral Disengagement | NS | NS | NS | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Learning to Read in a Healing Classroom | Yes | Yes | NS | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Linking the Interests of Families and Teachers (LIFT) | Yes | NS | Yes | Yes | NC | Yes | Yes | Yes | NC |
| Positive Action Hawaii | NC | NS | NS | Yes | NC | NC | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Positive Action Chicago | Yes | NS | NS | Yes | NC | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies (PATHS) | NC | NS | NS | Yes | NC | NC | Yes | Yes | NC |
| Reading Writing, Respect and Resolution (4Rs) | Yes | NS | NS | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Second Step | Yes | NS | NS | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Steps to Respect I | NC | NS | NS | Yes | NC | NC | Yes | Yes | NC |
| Steps to Respect II | NC | NS | NS | Yes | NC | NC | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Gatehouse | NC | NS | NS | Yes | NC | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Youth Matters | NC | NS | NS | Yes | NC | Yes | Yes | NS | Yes |
NC, not clear; NS, not stated.
Key themes in the intervention components analysis
| Key theme | Components within theme | Bullying Literature Project | Gatehouse | Learning to Read in a Healing Classroom | LIFT | Positive Action | PATHS | 4Rs | Second Step | Steps to Respect | Youth Matters |
| Approach to integration | Literature: did interventions use literature and language arts as the key vehicle for delivery? | Literature: | Literature: English classes used as a key vehicle for delivery of cognitive behavioural content relating to emotional learning and self-regulation | Literature: use of reading and language arts lessons to support socioemotional learning by providing lesson plans | Linking to developmental concerns: study skills were presented alongside socioemotional learning skills, such as empathy and how to play with peers. This content was restricted to the year 6 arm of the intervention | Local development: teachers are supported to integrate health education lessons (both social–emotional learning and health and well-being, eg, hygiene) throughout academic learning | Linking to developmental concerns: content on social–emotional learning was presented alongside study skills in later years of the programme | Literature: the intervention centres on a literacy-based curriculum relating conflict resolution and social–emotional learning to children’s literature | Local development: social–emotional learning is integrated into academic lessons alongside a manualised programme of content relating specifically to bullying, problem-solving, emotional regulation content and multimedia resources | Literature: the classroom component of this intervention relates to a programme of literature-based lessons designed to convey antibullying messages | Literature: stories are used to discuss healthy relationships, resistance to bullying and aggressive behaviours, and to practice skills, including via projects relating to literacy lessons |
| Domains of integration | Classroom: did interventions focus on the classroom? | Classroom: focus on classroom teaching only via book reading and accompanying activities | Classroom and whole-school domains: in addition to classroom learning strategies, a school health team supported by eternal consultants sought to identify ways to improve school climate to promote health and well-being | Classroom and whole-school domains: in addition to lesson plans to support classroom teaching, pedagogic circles facilitated school meetings led to exchange of ideas on how to improve school climate | Classroom, whole-school and external domains: in addition to supporting study skills alongside social–emotional learning, parents received a series of parenting classes and teachers were encouraged to communicate with parents via a phone line recorded message | Classroom, whole-school and external domains: in addition to extensively manualised lessons, a school climate team was assembled as part of the intervention with a schoolwide ‘champion’ for intervention implementation. Parents are also involved through homework and ‘take-home’ assignments, as well as community engagement, though this was not a feature in the Chicago trial | Classroom, whole-school and external domains: manualised lessons relating to social– emotional learning and self-regulation are accompanied with school-wide implementation to promote generalised positive norms and parent information | Classroom: teachers receive substantial professional development to implement the intervention using specific materials prepared as part of the intervention | Classroom: intervention delivered in the classroom context specifically | Classroom and whole-school domains: in addition to classroom literacy-based learning, a whole-school policy team developed school-wide responses to bullying | Classroom and whole-school domains: lessons delivered in the classroom context, but whole-school events ‘showcasing’ work part of the intervention activities |
| Degree of integration | Did interventions include full or partial integration of health education alongside academic education? | Full integration: lessons designed to develop literacy skills | Full integration: the use of ‘critical literacy’ to convey social–emotional learning was seamlessly integrated into English classes | Full integration: lessons designed to integrate social–emotional learning into enhanced provision of reading and literacy | Partial integration: the intervention was set apart from other academic learning | Partial integration: discrete lessons relating to Positive Action are presented as part of the intervention | Partial integration: manualised intervention lessons presented alongside academic content | Full integration: learning is presented alongside literature and reading lessons | Partial integration: separate lessons for intervention content are presented alongside integration | Full integration: lessons designed to address key literacy goals | Full integration: intervention ‘led’ by literacy and literature content |
| Timing of integration | Were interventions 1 year or multiple years in duration? | 1 year | Multiple years | Multiple years | 1 year | Multiple years | Multiple years | Multiple years | Multiple years | Multiple years/1 year | Multiple years |
Measures used in included studies and effect estimates
| Evaluation | Measure | Notes | Effect estimate |
| Violence perpetration | |||
| Reading, Writing, Respect and Reconciliation | Aggression | Frequency score on 13 aggressive behaviours assessed by teacher report in last month, including physical aggression and threatening of others | Key stage (KS)2 |
| Bullying Literature Project | Physical bullying | Assessed by teacher and student report; mean of frequency scores relating to reports of violence | KS2 |
| Bullying Literature Project—Moral Disengagement | Bullying | Assessed by student report; mean of frequency scores relating to physical and emotional bullying | KS2 |
| Linking the Interests of Families and Teachers | Change in child physical playground aggression | Measured by observation; includes physical bullying by observed children | KS2 |
| Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies (PATHS) | Aggression | Assessed by teacher and student report; mean of frequency scores relating to verbal and physical aggression | KS2 |
| Positive Action Chicago | Bullying | Student report: count of bullying behaviours relating to verbal or physical aggression behaviours in the past 2 weeks | KS2 |
| Violence-related behaviours | Count of lifetime behaviours: carried a knife, threatened to cut or stab someone, cut or stabbed someone on purpose, been asked to join a gang, hung out with gang members, been a member of a gang | KS2 | |
| Positive Action Hawaii | Count of violent behaviours | Teacher, student report | KS2 |
| Cut or stabbed others | Student report, lifetime prevalence | KS2 | |
| Shot another person | Student report, lifetime prevalence | KS2 | |
| Physically hurts others | Teacher report | KS2 | |
| Gets into a lot of fights | Teacher report | KS2 | |
| Second Step | Physical aggression perpetration | Student report, endorse any fighting behaviours in the last 30 days | KS3 |
| Sexual harassment and violence perpetration | Student report, endorse any verbal sexual violence or groping behaviours or forced sexual contact | KS3 | |
| Steps to Respect I | Bullying | Playground observation of students | KS2 |
| Direct aggression | Mean of student reported frequency scores of direct bullying | Decrease not significant in intervention group compared with control: | |
| Steps to Respect II | Bullying perpetration | Measured by student report; proportion of students with at least one bullying behaviour | KS2 |
| Physical bullying perpetration | Measured by teacher report; proportion of students with at least one physical bullying behaviour | KS2 | |
| Youth Matters | Bullying | At least two or three times a month on at least one bullying behaviour | KS2 |
| Bully, victim or bully–victim | Classification of students based on questionnaire responses into one of three categories | Bully or bully–victim | |
| Violence victimisation | |||
| Bullying Literature Project | Physical bullying | Assessed by teacher and student report; mean of frequency scores relating to reports of violence | KS2 |
| Bullying Literature Project—Moral Disengagement | Bullying victimisation | Assessed by student report; mean of frequency scores relating to physical and emotional bullying | KS2 |
| Gatehouse | Bullying victimisation | Assessed by student report; any of being teased, having rumours spread about them, deliberate exclusion or experience of threats or violence | KS4 |
| Learning to Read in a Healing Classroom | Victimisation | Assessed by student report; average of frequency scores of peer verbal and physical bullying | KS2 |
| PATHS | Victimisation | Assessed by student report; sum of frequency scores of victimisation in last 2 weeks | KS2 |
| Second Step | Peer victimisation | Student report, endorse any physical or verbal victimisation in last 30 days | KS3 |
| Sexual harassment and violence victimisation | Student report, endorse any victimisation by verbal sexual violence or groping behaviours or forced sexual contact | KS3 | |
| Steps to Respect I | Target of bullying | Playground observation of students | KS2 |
| Victimisation | Assessed by student report; mean of frequency scores for physical and verbal victimisation items | KS2 | |
| Steps to Respect II | Victimisation | Assessed by student report; mean of frequency scores for physical and verbal victimisation items | KS2 |
| Youth Matters | Victimisation | Assessed by student report; mean of frequency scores for physical and verbal victimisation items, and also at least two or three times a month victimisation at least one bullying behaviour | KS2 |
| Bully, victim or bully–victim | Classification of students based on questionnaire responses into one of three categories | Victim or bully–victim | |