| Literature DB >> 31390743 |
Helen Baker-Henningham1,2, Yakeisha Scott3, Marsha Bowers3, Taja Francis3.
Abstract
This study investigated the effect of a school-based violence prevention programme implemented in Grade 1 classrooms in Jamaican primary schools. Fourteen primary schools were randomly assigned to receive training in classroom behaviour management (n = 7 schools, 27 teachers/classrooms) or to a control group (n = 7 schools, 28 teachers/classrooms). Four children from each class were randomly selected to participate in the evaluation (n = 220 children). Teachers were trained through a combination of workshop and in-class support sessions, and received a mean of 11.5 h of training (range = 3-20) over 8 months. The primary outcomes were observations of (1) teachers' use of violence against children and (2) class-wide child aggression. Teachers in intervention schools used significantly less violence against children (effect size (ES) = -0.73); benefits to class-wide child aggression were not significant (ES = -0.20). Intervention teachers also provided a more emotionally supportive classroom environment (ES = 1.22). No benefits were found to class-wide prosocial behaviour, teacher wellbeing, or child mental health. The intervention benefited children's early learning skills, especially oral language and self-regulation skills (ES = 0.25), although no benefits were found to achievement in maths calculation, reading and spelling. A relatively brief teacher-training programme reduced violence against children by teachers and increased the quality of the classroom environment.Entities:
Keywords: child behaviour; corporal punishment; low- and middle-income country; primary school; teacher training; violence
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31390743 PMCID: PMC6696405 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16152797
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Trial profile.
Outcome measures.
| Description of Measures Used | |
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| Physical punishment | Hitting with hand, hitting with object, forcefully pushing or pulling, shaking, pinching, poking, throwing an object at the child, making the child stand or kneel in uncomfortable positions (e.g., stand with hands out to the side). |
| Verbal abuse | Calling the child by a derogatory name (e.g., idiot, dummy, fool), threatening physical punishment, threatening the child in way that would frighten them (e.g., threaten to lock them up), threatening to withhold food, rejection, encouraging other children to harm, insult or exclude the child (e.g., encouraging a child to hit another child). |
| Other abuse | Intimidation (e.g., banging a stick hard on the desk in front of a child), non-verbal threat (e.g., using stick/ruler to threaten child with physical punishment). |
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| Class-wide child aggression 1 | The score for class-wide aggression reflects the frequency, intensity and number of children involved in aggressive acts. Higher scores indicate more aggression. |
| Class-wide child prosocial behaviour | The score for class-wide prosocial behaviour reflects the frequency, intensity and number of children involved in prosocial acts (i.e., sharing, helping and cooperating). Higher scores indicate more prosocial behaviour. |
| Levels of emotional support | Emotional support was measured using the Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS)- K-3 [ |
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| Teachers’ use of violence | Event sampling of teachers’ use of violence against children (physical punishment, verbal abuse, other abuse) over one full school day and over five 20 min observation periods on another school day. The scores represent whether or not the teacher used physical violence, verbal abuse, other violence and violence of any type against children over the two days of observation. |
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| Behavioural difficulties and prosocial skills | Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire by teacher report: a total difficulties (20 questions) and prosocial (5 questions) score were computed [ |
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| Oral language skills | Understanding Directions and Story Recall from the Woodcock–Johnson III Tests of Achievement [ |
| Reading | Letter word identification and Passage Comprehension from the Woodcock–Johnson (WJ) III Diagnostic Reading Battery [ |
| Phonics | Word attack and spelling of sounds subscales from the Woodcock–Johnson III Diagnostic Reading Battery [ |
| Spelling | Spelling subscale from the Woodcock–Johnson III Tests of Achievement [ |
| Maths | Calculation and Reasoning and Concepts subscales from the Woodcock–McGrew–Werder Mini-Battery of Achievement [ |
| Self-regulation | Rated during the test session using eleven four point scales from the Preschool Self-Regulation Assessment: Assessor Report [ |
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| Depressive symptoms | Frequency of depressive symptoms using the Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale [ |
| Burnout | Teacher burnout measured using the Teacher Burnout Scale [ |
| Teaching self-efficacy | Four subscales from the Bandura’s Teaching Self-Efficacy Scale: instructional, disciplinary, enlisting parent involvement and creating a positive school climate [ |
Primary outcomes.
Teacher, classroom and child characteristics by intervention group.
| Intervention | Control | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Teacher and Classroom Characteristics | |||
| % female | 100% | 100% | 1.00 |
| % completed high school | 100% | 100% | 1.00 |
| % with a Dip.Ed or B.Ed | 100% | 100% | 1.00 |
| Teacher age 1 | 39.5 (10.9) | 43.2 (10.2) | 0.23 |
| Number of years teaching 1 | 14.9 (9.9) | 16.8 (9.8) | 0.50 |
| Number years teaching at this school 1 | 11.2 (9.7) | 10.0 (8.1) | 0.63 |
| No. children in class 1 | 30.2 (6.5) | 30.0 (5.2) | 0.91 |
| Child Characteristics | |||
| Child age 1 | 7.00 (0.36) | 6.90 (0.30) | 0.01 |
| % male | 54 (50.5%) | 53 (49.5%) | 0.69 |
1 Values are mean (SD).
Classroom, teacher and child outcomes at post-test by intervention group 1.
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| Primary Outcomes | ||
| Teachers’ use of violence over one school day (median, range) | 4 (0–70) | 12 (0–81) |
| Children’s class-wide aggression 2 | 4.16 (1.25) | 4.40 (1.20) |
| Secondary Outcomes | ||
| Emotional quality of classroom 2 | 4.10 (0.66) | 3.48 (0.51) |
| Children’s class-wide prosocial behaviour 2 | 2.33 (0.73) | 2.21 (0.67) |
| Teacher depression 3 (median, range) | 9.0 (0–46) | 8.0 (0–48) |
| Teacher burnout 4 | 33.8 (11.8) | 34.2 (12.2) |
| Teacher self-efficacy 5 (median, range) | 142 (72–172) | 127 (102–164) |
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| Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire | ||
| Behavioural difficulties 6 | 9.12 (6.50) | 9.55 (5.94) |
| Prosocial behaviour 7 | 6.82 (2.60) | 7.20 (2.36) |
| Child Academic Achievement | ||
| Understanding directions | 25.75 (6.51) | 24.00 (7.06) |
| Story recall | 30.22 (15.07) | 30.38 (18.28) |
| Letter word ID | 27.54 (9.09) | 28.00 (9.60) |
| Reading comprehension | 13.63 (6.30) | 14.01 (6.54) |
| Word attack, median (range) | 6 (2–31) | 6 (1–31) |
| Spelling of sounds | 20.41 (7.66) | 19.33 (7.58) |
| Spelling | 21.22 (5.66) | 21.88 (5.83) |
| Calculation | 7.49 (2.89) | 6.79 (3.16) |
| Maths reasoning (median, range) | 28 (18–35) | 27 (10–32) |
| Self-regulation 8 (median, range) | 31 (13–33) | 31 (15–33) |
1 All values are mean (SD) unless otherwise specified; 2 Rated on a seven point scale (1–2 = low, 3–5 = medium, 5–7 = high); 3 Depressive symptoms: min = 0, max = 60; 4 Burn out: min = 20, max = 100; 5 Teaching self-efficacy: min = 25, max = 150; 6 Behavioural difficulties: min = 0, max = 40; 7 Prosocial behaviour: min = 0, max = 10; 8 Self-regulation: min = 0, max = 33.
Effect of intervention on teacher, classroom and child outcomes 1,2.
| Measure | Regression Coefficient B (95% CI) | ICC 3 | Effect Size 4 (95% CI) | |
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| Primary Outcomes | ||||
| Teachers’ use of violence against children 5 | −0.38 (−0.68, −0.08) | 0.05 | −0.73 (−0.15, −1.31) | <0.0001 |
| Class-wide child aggression 6 | −0.24 (−0.88, 0.40) | 0.00 | −0.20 (−0.73, 0.33) | 0.47 |
| Secondary Outcomes: teacher and classroom outcomes | ||||
| CLASS: emotional support 6 | 0.62 (0.29, 0.95) | 0.09 | 1.22 (0.57, 1.87) | <0.0001 |
| Class-wide child prosocial behaviour 6 | 0.12 (−0.24, 0.48) | 0.00 | 0.18 (−0.36, 0.72) | 0.52 |
| Poor teacher wellbeing 7 | −0.11 (−0.63, 0.42) | 0.00 | −0.11 (−0.63, 0.43) | 0.69 |
| Secondary Outcomes: individual child outcomes | ||||
| Child behavioural difficulties 8 | −0.64 (−3.17, 1.89) | 0.06 | −0.11 (−0.53, 0.32) | 0.62 |
| Child prosocial behaviour 8 | −0.32 (−1.27, 0.63) | 0.03 | −0.14 (−0.54, 0.27) | 0.50 |
| Academic achievement factor 9 | −0.01 (−0.55, 0.55) | 0.21 | −0.004 (−0.54, 0.54) | 0·99 |
| Language & self-regulation factor 10 | 0.25 (−0.02, 0.52) | 0.00 | 0.25 (−0.02, 0.52) | 0·07 |
1 Analysis adjusting for observer/interviewer as fixed effects and school and classroom as random effects. 2 Intervention group = 1, control group = 0. 3 Intra-cluster correlation coefficient; 4 The effect size is the regression coefficient divided by standard deviation of control group at post-test. 5 Log transformed score; observations taken over one full school day; 6 Observer ratings over six 20 min periods over 1 school day; 7 Factor score of frequency of depressive symptoms, teacher burn out & self-efficacy; 8 Teacher reported child behaviour using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire; 9 Factor score: reading, spelling, phonics, maths calculation (see Supplementary Table S4). 10 Factor score: oral language, self-regulation, maths reasoning (see Supplementary Table S4).
Teachers’ use of violence over 2 days at post-test by intervention group.
| Intervention | Control | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| No physical violence | 6 (22.2%) | 1 (3.7%) | 0.04 |
| No verbal abuse | 10 (37%) | 3 (11.1%) | 0.03 |
| No other violence | 22 (81.5%) | 13 (48.1%) | 0.01 |
| No violence of any type | 3 (11.1%) | 0 (0%) | 0.08 |
Results from Semi-Structured Interviews.
| Subtheme | Examples of Quotes |
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| The strategies work, so do not need to use CP (14) | “It lessen, put it this way, what I would normally slap them for, I don’t slap them for that anymore—because I have the strategies that helps me.” |
| Children are better behaved (5) | “They are behaving in the way you want them to behave so you don’t have to reprimand them because they are actually doing what is expected of them.” |
| Teacher better able to stay calm (7) | “It helps me to be more relaxed than I used to be. I used to get easily upset but it has calmed me, helped me to relax and basically to be more understanding.” |
| Using the strategies is less stressful than using CP (5) | “Less strenuous on teacher. The energy you would use to slap them, you use the strategies. Saves you physically and mentally, voice don’t go and you don’t have to be hitting children.” |
| Better relationship with children (5) | “It makes me see the good. I see children who are kind and helpful. So, it allows you to see them in another light. When you praise them—you see the good in them” |
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| It works (5) | “Everybody pays attention, yes and they stop what they’re not supposed to do ’cause they’re afraid of the stick.” |
| CP is used at home (5) | “Because it’s what they are used to at home, once they see the strap then they will keep quiet.” |
| Use when other strategies don’t work (5) | “You know sometimes you do some of the strategies and the children don’t respond to it and you tend to want to get the strap.” |
| For antisocial behaviours (8) | “I don’t slap often but I do slap if a child is behaving bad, like spitting on a next child. Or if they do something bad to another child like slap them. I don’t normally do it—they have to do something bad and out the norm.” |
Numbers in parentheses indicate the number of teachers who mentioned the subtheme.