35 research outputs found

    Indicated Truancy Interventions: Effects on School Attendance Among Chronic Truant Students.

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUNDTruancy is a significant problem in the U.S. and in other countries around the world. Truancy has been linked to serious immediate and far-reaching consequences for youth, families, and schools and communities, leading researchers, practitioners, and policy makers to try to understand and to address the problem. Although numerous and significant steps have been taken at the local, state, and national levels to reduce truancy, the rates of truancy have at best remained stable or at worst been on the rise, depending on the indicator utilized to assess truancy rates. The costs and impact of chronic truancy are significant, with both short- and long-term implications for the truant youth as well as for the family, school, and community. Although several narrative reviews and one meta-analysis of attendance and truancy interventions have attempted to summarize the extant research, there are a number of limitations to these reviews. It is imperative that we systematically synthesize and examine the evidence base to provide a comprehensive picture of interventions that are being utilized to intervene with chronic truants, to identify interventions that are effective and ineffective, and to identify gaps and areas in which more research needs to be conducted to better inform practice and policy.OBJECTIVESThe main objective of this systematic review was to examine the effects of interventions on school attendance to inform policy, practice, and research. The questions guiding this study were: 1) Do truancy programs with a goal of increasing student attendance for truant youth affect school attendance behaviors of elementary and secondary students with chronic attendance problems?2) Are there differences in the effects of school-based, clinic/community-based, and court-based programs?3) Are some modalities (i.e., family, group, multimodal) more effective than others in increasing student attendance? SEARCH STRATEGYA systematic and comprehensive search process was employed to locate all possible studies between 1990 and 2009, with every effort made to include both published and unpublished studies to minimize publication bias. A wide range of electronic bibliographic databases and research registers was searched, websites of relevant research centers and groups were mined for possible reports, over 200 e-mails and letters were sent to programs listed in large databases of truancy programs compiled by the National Center for School Engagement and the National Dropout Prevention Center, and contact with researchers in the field of truancy and absenteeism was attempted. In addition, we examined reference lists of all previous reviews as well as citations in research reports for potential studies.SELECTION CRITERIAStudies eligible for this review were required to meet several eligibility criteria. Studies must have utilized a randomized, quasi-experimental, or single-group pre-posttest design with the aim of evaluating the effectiveness of interventions with a stated primary goal of increasing student attendance (or decreasing absenteeism) among chronic truant students. Studies must have measured an attendance outcome and reported sufficient data to calculate an effect size. Finally, studies must have been published between 1990 and 2009 in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, or Canada. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSISA total of 28 studies, reported in 26 reports, met final eligibility criteria and were included in this review and meta-analysis. Of the studies that were included, 5 utilized a randomized design (RCT), 11 utilized a quasi-experimental design (QED), and 12 utilized a single group pre-posttest design (SGPP). All eligible studies were coded using a structured coding instrument, with 20% of studies coded by a second coder. Descriptive analysis was conducted to examine and describe data related to the characteristics of the included studies. Analysis of the mean effect size, the heterogeneity of effect sizes, and the relationship between effect size and methodological and substantive characteristics of the interventions was also conducted separately for the RCT/QED studies and the SGPP studies. The effect sizes were calculated using the standardized mean difference effect size statistic, correcting for small sample size using Hedges’ g (Hedges, 1992). Assuming a mixed effects model, the analog to the ANOVA and bivariate meta-regression frameworks were used to examine potential moderating variables related to study, participant, and intervention characteristics. RESULTSThe meta-analytic findings demonstrated a significant overall positive and moderate mean effect of interventions on attendance outcomes. The mean effect size for interventions examined in the included RCT studies was .57 and the mean effect size for the QED studies was .43. No significant differences were observed between the RCT and QED studies in the magnitude of the treatment effect (Qb= .28, p \u3e.05). The mean effect size of interventions examined using an SGPP design was .95. A moderate effect on attendance outcomes is encouraging; however, the overall mean effect size is masked by a large amount of heterogeneity, indicating significant variance in effect sizes between studies. Moderator analyses found no significant differences in mean effects between studies on any moderating variable tested. No differences were found between school-, court-, or community-based programs or between different modalities of programs. The duration of the intervention also did not demonstrate any association with effect size. Collaborative programs and multimodal interventions produced statistically similar effects on attendance as non-collaborative and single-modality programs, which runs counter to the prevailing beliefs and recommendations for best practices in truancy reduction found in the literature.Other significant findings from this study relate to methodological shortcomings, the absence of important variables as well as gaps in the evidence base. These findings include the lack of inclusion of minority students and a lack of reporting and statistical analysis of demographic variables, particularly race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status (SES). Given that race and SES have been linked to absenteeism, the absence of this data was surprising. The majority of studies also lacked adequate descriptions of the interventions, making replication of the intervention difficult, and failed to measure and report long-term outcomes. AUTHORS’ CONCLUSIONSOverall, the findings from this study suggest that chronic truant students benefit from interventions targeting attendance behaviors; thus it is important and worthwhile to intervene with chronic truant youth. Given the minimal differences in effects across program types and modalities, no one program type or modality stands out as being more effective than any other. Although no statistically significant differences in effects were found between types and modalities of interventions included in this review, there was a lack of available evidence to support the general belief (and popular “best-practice” recommendations) that collaborative and multimodal interventions are more effective than programs that are not collaborative and single modal interventions. Due to the small sample size and large heterogeneity between studies and within groups of studies, caution must be used when interpreting and applying the findings from this meta-analysis. Overall, the studies included in the review improved attendance by an average of 4.69 days, almost a full school week. However, although the interventions included in this study were, overall, found to be effective, the mean rates of absenteeism at posttest in most studies remained above acceptable levels. This finding indicates the need for additional work and research. Developing more effective interventions and policies as well as studying outcomes of interventions, particularly with vulnerable and at-risk populations, is crucial to combating absenteeism. The gaps and deficiencies identified in this study also affirm the need for increasing and strengthening the evidence base on which current policies and practices rest. Although additional outcome research is necessary, more of the same is not sufficient. Significant improvements in the quality of truancy intervention research are required and identified gaps need to be addressed. Recommendations to improve the quality and fill gaps in truancy intervention research are discussed here. In addition, given the significant and pervasive deficiencies in the extant research, a critical analysis of the practices, assumptions, and sociopolitical contexts underlying truancy intervention research seems warranted

    Indicated Truancy Interventions: Effects on School Attendance among Chronic Truant Students

    Full text link

    Individual and Social Temporalities in American Sociology (1940-2000)

    Get PDF
    This article is based on the analysis of 259 titles of articles selected from four American sociological journals (the American Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, the American Sociological Review and Social Problems), over a period of 60 years (1940–2000). These titles contain key words such as age(s), generation(s), life cycle and life course, as well as a group of words that identify the purpose of each specific article. The lexical analysis of the data gathered in this way allows us to observe how various orientations, themes and objects of research are encoded in the titles. Comparing how each of these terms is used shows the way in which sociological reasoning has integrated different perspectives on individual and social temporalities. We have established that each of the four different perspectives considered refers to an exclusive lexical repertoire, to themes of differentiated research that belong to a specific historical period

    Le passage tardif à l’âge adulte des Italiens: entre maintien du modèle traditionnel et individualisation des trajectoires biographiques

    No full text
    Si l’allongement de la jeunesse a été observé partout en Europe, le prolongement de la permanence des jeunes au domicile parental assume en Italie et en Europe du Sud des proportions plus importantes qu’ailleurs. Les sociologues italiens focalisent leur attention sur les transformations des relations intergénérationnelles au sein de la « famille prolongée (« famiglia lunga »). En dépit de ce consensus, les modalités du passage à l’âge adulte voient s’opposer les chercheurs qui plaident pour l’émergence d’une individualisation des trajectoires à ceux qui estiment que les étapes de cette transition restent dans la plupart des cas ordonnées selon une séquence bien précise : fin des études, entrée sur le marché du travail, départ du domicile parental, mariage et naissance du premier enfant

    The Cosmopolitan ‘Bildung’ of Erasmus Students’ Going Abroad

    No full text

    Estudio del paso a la edad adulta de los italianos: Entre atravesar los umbrales de forma ordenada y la individualización de las trayectorias biográficas

    No full text
    Este artículo analiza los aspectos específicos de la transición de los jóvenes italianos a la edad adulta. Si se ha observado un alargamiento de la juventud en toda Europa, la prolongación de la permanencia de los jóvenes en el domicilio paterno alcanza en Italia (y en el sur de Europa) proporciones mayores que en otros lugares. Asimismo, los sociólogos italianos centran su atención sobre las transformaciones de las relaciones entre generaciones insistiendo en las grandes libertades de las que se benefician los jóvenes y en la relativa ausencia de limitaciones. Por el contrario, quedan de algún modo poco analizados factores como la debilidad de las políticas públicas dirigidas a los jóvenes y las estrecheces del mercado de los alquileres. Aunque exista un amplio consenso sobre la importancia de la socialización familiar de los jóvenes, las modalidades de paso a la edad adulta enfrentan a los investigadores que defienden el surgimiento de una individualización de las trayectorias con los que consideran que las etapas de esta transición quedan en la mayoría de los casos ordenadas conforme a una secuencia precisa: final de los estudios, incorporación al mercado laboral, salida del domicilio paterno, matrimonio y nacimiento del primer hijo

    Global Society, Cosmopolitanism and Human Rights

    No full text
    The “Global society, cosmopolitanism and human rights” research team (GSCHR), composed by some dozen of European and extra-European scholars, has accepted the invitation of the Italian sociological Association – Sociological Theories Section and of the International Association of the French Language Sociologists for systematizing and focuses the researches on this issues. In the recent years the state-nation paradigm has changed in the global society one as the Western cultural model has given the priority to the multiple experiences in the different world contexts. Today the multiplicity is a suggestive testing ground for those sociologists that want to deepen the Eisenstadt theories. The contributions of some GSCHR scholars, collected in this book, intend to explore these theories and similar by interdisciplinary tools – e. g. the comparison with Kant (Telegdi-Csetri) – and in different social and geographical contexts (Cordeiro through work-life balance and Sorana with Latin-American arms exportations). One of the main hypothesis is the European cultural challenge in the global society: the integration of the European democratic values and human rights in the “cosmopolitanism model”. There are some hurdles that make it difficult: the uncertainty of the law and the global communication of the human rights, the assessment of the risk scenarios and the confrontation of the cultures. The contributions of this book open only some of the views on this issue, starting from the essential notions of a new sociological branch of research. Its knowledge is recommended to the social sciences students and to all the teachers of the same educational level. The issues is a relevant field of research also for the scholars that work on he global scenarios and their specificities
    corecore