Adolescence (12-18 years)
How Trust Grows: Teenagers' Accounts of Forming Trust in Youth Program Staff
Trust is a critical ingredient to young people’s experience of effective learning relationships with youth program leaders. Youth’s trust typically follows trajectories that grow over time spent in a program through interactions with leaders.
How Trust Grows: Teenagers' Accounts of Forming Trust in Youth Program Staff
Youth programs focus on a variety of skills and tasks, but this study reviewed the common theme of how youth build trust in their program leaders.
Psychosocial Screening in Children With Wartime-Deployed Parents
Children of U.S. military families are exposed to unique challenges and stressors directly related to their parents' wartime deployments, potentially placing them at higher risk for psychosocial disruption.
Psychosocial Screening in Children With Wartime-Deployed Parents
Self-report data from parent and youth were utilized to investigate the effects of parental military deployment on adolescents' psychosocial difficulties (internalizing symptoms like depression and anxiety and externalizing symptoms like school and attention problems).
Psychological Health of Military Children: Longitudinal Evaluation of a Family-Centered Prevention Program to Enhance Family Resilience
Family-centered preventive interventions have been proposed as relevant to mitigating psychological health risk and promoting resilience in military families facing wartime deployment and reintegration.
Psychological Health of Military Children: Longitudinal Evaluation of a Family-Centered Prevention Program to Enhance Family Resilience
The impact of a family centered prevention program, Families OverComing Under Stress Family Resilience Training (FOCUS), on the psychological adjustment of military children and parents was examined.