| Literature DB >> 35943615 |
Jennifer Doty1, Joy Gabrielli2, Michelle Abraczinskas3, Karla Girón3, Jacqlyn Yourell3, Elizabeth Stormshak4.
Abstract
Parenting skills are important protective factors in the prevention of bullying and cyberbullying, yet few parent-based interventions have been developed and evaluated in this area. This pilot study examined participant responsiveness to and acceptability of an evidence-based parenting curriculum enhanced to address bullying and cyberbullying. Enhancements included intensive role playing, social emotional coaching, and media parenting. The pilot was delivered online via video conferencing during the unique circumstances of the coronavirus disease pandemic 2019 (COVID-19) shelter-at-home orders. Parents (N = 32; 88% female) participated in weekly online sessions; 30 completed all eight sessions. Using a sequential exploratory mixed method approach, we first conducted quantitative analyses to examine participant responsiveness and qualitative analyses to further explain outcomes and explore participant acceptability. Satisfaction with individual sessions was high. In a few sessions, satisfaction and home practice completion was lower among those with free- and reduced-price lunch eligibility. Qualitative data reinforced and explained quantitative findings. Participants were appreciative of the program and delivery, particularly during the shelter-at-home conditions. They voiced satisfaction with the online format and with home practice assignments. They also made suggestions to strengthen the emphasis on bullying and cyberbullying in the program. Results suggest that the program and enhancements to the program were acceptable to participants, and high rates of satisfaction suggest that video conferencing is a feasible delivery format. Further, parental programming during the stressful context of the COVID-19 pandemic was well received. Although few differences in satisfaction by free- and reduced-priced lunch were observed, technology support for low-income families may be warranted.Entities:
Keywords: Bullying prevention; Multi-phase optimization strategy; Parent-based prevention; Participant responsiveness
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35943615 PMCID: PMC9361954 DOI: 10.1007/s10935-022-00696-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Prev (2022) ISSN: 2731-5533
Enrollment and Session Completion
| Mean age of parents in years | 39.6 |
| Female | 28 (88%) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |
| Asian | 1 (3%) |
| Black | 9 (28%) |
| Latino | 2 (6%) |
| White | 18 (56%) |
| Multiracial | 2 (6%) |
| One year of college or more | 24 (77%) |
| Income less than $3000/yr. | 14 (43%) |
| Interest in the program | 63 |
| Interest within 6 weeks | 49 (77.7%) |
| How parents learned about study | |
| Facebook ads | 50.0% |
| Social media posts | 18.3% |
| University studies page | 6.7% |
| Other means | 25.0% |
| Enrollment | 32 |
| Completed half the program | 31 (96.9%) |
| Completed all 8 sessions | 30 (93.8%) |
Factorial Design of Core Program Plus Components
| Conditions | Brief Everyday Parenting—constant | TECH Parenting Adaptation (Y/N)* | Social-emotional Learning (Y/N)* | Role Play (Y/N)* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Core | TECH | SEL | Digital |
| 2 | Core | TECH | SEL | None |
| 3 | Core | TECH | None | Digital |
| 4 | Core | TECH | None | None |
| 5 | Core | None | SEL | Digital |
| 6 | Core | None | SEL | None |
| 7 | Core | None | None | Digital |
| 8 | Core | None | None | None |
Note. *Half of the families were assigned to each component condition using a balanced design.
Sessions by Condition Assignment
| Sessions by week | Conditions 1 & 2* | Conditions 3 & 4* | Conditions 5 & 6* | Conditions 7 & 8* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Supporting positive behavior | Supporting positive behavior | Supporting positive behavior | Supporting positive behavior |
| 2 | Positive behavior reinforcement | Positive behavior reinforcement | Positive behavior reinforcement | Positive behavior reinforcement |
| 3 | SEL Coaching | Practice Session | SEL Coaching | Practice Session |
| 4 | Monitoring daily activities | Monitoring daily activities | Monitoring daily activities | Monitoring daily activities |
| 5 | Setting limits & consequences | Setting limits & consequences | Setting limits & consequences | Setting limits & consequences |
| 6 | TECH Parenting | TECH Parenting | Practice Session | Practice Session |
| 7 | Family negotiation | Family negotiation | Family negotiation | Family negotiation |
| 8 | Shared Routines | Shared Routines | Shared Routines | Shared Routines |
Note. * Families in odd number conditions engaged in role play with their facilitator; families in even numbered conditions did not.
Differences in Perceived Program Quality and Home Practice Completion by Eligibility for Free- and Reduced-Price Lunch
| Session Satisfaction | Session Completed | Session Satisfaction | Session Satisfaction | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean ( | Participants | Mean ( | Mean ( | Mean Difference | Bootstrapped 95% Confidence Interval | ||
| Week 1 | 3.94 (0.25) | 32 | 3.88 (0.34) | 4.00 (0.00) | 0.125* | [0.053, 0.286] | |
| Week 2 | 3.90 (0.25) | 31 | 3.81 (0.40) | 4.00 (0.00) | 0.188* | [0.059, 0.385] | |
| Week 3 | 4.00 (0.00) | 30 | 4.00 (0.00) | 4.00 (0.00) | 0.000 | NA | |
| Week 4 | 4.00 (0.00) | 30 | 4.00 (0.00) | 4.00 (0.00) | 0.000 | NA | |
| Week 5 | 4.00 (0.00) | 30 | 4.00 (0.00) | 4.00 (0.00) | 0.000 | NA | |
| Week 6 | 4.00 (0.00) | 30 | 4.00 (0.00) | 4.00 (0.00) | 0.000 | NA | |
| Week 7 | 4.00 (0.00) | 30 | 4.00 (0.00) | 4.00 (0.00) | 0.000 | NA | |
| Week 8 | 3.97 (0.18) | 30 | 3.93 (0.26) | 4.00 (0.00) | 0.067 | [0.053, 0.235] | |
| Overall Program | 4.00 (0.00) | 4.00 (0.00) | 4.00 (0.00) | 0.000 | NA | ||
Home Practice Completion Entire Sample | Homework Fully Completed (# Participants) | Home Practice Eligible FRL | Home Practice Not Eligible for FRL | ||||
| Week 2 | 3.58 (0.13) | 21 | 3.64 (0.67) | 3.50 (0.82) | 0.136 | [-0.436, 0.385] | |
| Week 3 | 3.60 (0.10) | 19 | 3.80 (0.42) | 3.44 (0.63) | 0.362* | [0.000, 0.700] | |
| Week 4 | 3.55 (0.14) | 22 | 3.55 (0.82) | 3.63 (0.72) | − 0.080 | [-0.701, 0.473] | |
| Week 5 | 3.83 (0.47) | 25 | 3.80 (0.42) | 3.93 (0.26) | − 0.133 | [-400, 0.082] | |
| Week 6 | 3.62 (0.14) | 21 | 3.73 (0.47) | 3.50 (0.94) | 0.227 | [-0.241, 0.756] | |
| Week 7 | 3.76 (0.10) | 23 | 3.80 (0.42) | 3.67 (0.62) | 0.133 | [-0.270, 0.616] | |
| Week 8 | 3.57 (0.15) | 22 | 3.27 (1.20) | 3.73 (0.59) | − 0.460 | [-1.27, 0.283] | |
Note. * p < .10
Quotations Representing Qualitative Themes
| Example Quotes | |
|---|---|
| Satisfaction | |
| Program Content (n = 21; 85%) | “I think that this program kind of allowed me that opportunity in that safe space to reevaluate how I’m doing as a dad, and how my relationships with the girls are going….I perceive it as a really beneficial and useful tool to give me an opportunity to say, ‘Okay, well, how’s this going? Like, what am I doing well, what can I improve on?’” “It definitely added structure during [the pandemic stay-at-home-orders], you know. It was a good way to deal with their behavior, which could have been 10 times worse as far as I’m concerned, if there were not much structure having to be home bound for all this.” Regarding media parenting: “[My son] came to me and was like, ‘Hey, I wanted to ask you about this and why they were talking about this on the show I was watching. What is it? Why is it bad?’ And, you know, we were able to sit down and talk, and he wouldn’t normally do that. So by me being calmer and communicating better with him lately, he’s opening up to me….It is a big deal.” |
| Program Delivery (n = 18; 69%) | “It was like having a conversation with someone, like, if you see a therapist or something. You’re having a conversation, which was good, because as an adult, unless you’re actually learning something, you really don’t want to just sit there and have somebody telling you a bunch of information.” Having a facilitator of the same race: “I told [the facilitator] this one day, ‘Seeing you, it’s really, really surprising. But seeing more people that looks like us…. I just feel like things are taken in a different perspective when it’s coming from someone who we feel like can relate to with.’” |
| Convenience of Online Format (n = 17; 65%) | “It ended up being something that I just really look forward to, through the week. As a parent, it seems like no matter how much you try, sometimes it seems like you’re always rushing…. I think having the convenience where I could wake up, walk the dogs, feed the dogs, and have a little bit of time to just kind of go over my notes and stuff, and then just hop on the computer was really useful.” |
| Home Practice Benefits and Brriers benefits (n = 13; 50%) and barriers (n = 13; 50%) | “Definitely, the key is it’s so easy to fall right back into your old habits, you know, and things just start going all over the place, and at least now we have something….We have the worksheets. We could go back and say, ‘Okay, we need to try this over again because we’ve lost him.’ You know what I mean? At least we have those tools now.” “Things got hectic midweek. That’s why you might have a nice reminder to just sort of prompt [people]. Gently prompt them, so they don’t…feel like you’re being pushy.” |
Suggestions for Improvements (n = 14; 54%) | “[Be] clear about what some of this had to do with [preventing cyberbullying] at first and giving a little more examples or ideas so that it helps.” “It would have been kind of cool to, maybe all at the end maybe if all of us could have gotten together and spoken, you know, as families who are going through similar things or whatnot.” |
Note. 27/32 parents participated in final interviews; one recording was corrupt resulting in 26 coded interviews