Adolescence (12-18 years)
This article explores the opportunity to create spaces within the family, school, and community that specifically promote the well-being of transgender adolescents and young adults. When social contexts are supportive, transgender youth report significantly less risk.
2010
McGuire, J. K.
Conover-Williams, M.
Transgender youth encounter unique experiences and thus have particular needs. Researchers conducted focus groups with 36 transgender youth to identify their unique experiences and needs and their recommendations for how programs can best support transgender youth.
2010
McGuire, J. K.
Conover-Williams, M.
This study reports on the findings from a 6-year follow-up of a randomized trial of the Family Bereavement Program (FBP) on the outcomes for spousally bereaved parents.
2016
Sandler, I.
Tein, J. Y.
Wolchik, S.
Ayers, T. S.
Youth who experience the death of a parent may be at increased risk for later suicide.
2016
Sandler, I.
Tein, J. Y.
Wolchik, S.
Ayers, T. S.
Objective: Parenting through the deployment cycle presents unique stressors for military families.
2016
DeVoe, E. R.
Paris, R.
Emmert-Aronson, B.
Ross, A.
Acker, M.
Deployment may have a unique impact on very young children (i.e., birth to six years old) in military families. This study evaluated the efficacy of an eight-module home-visiting program directed at increasing postdeployment parenting functioning in military families with very young children.
2016
DeVoe, E. R.
Paris, R.
Emmert-Aronson, B.
Ross, A.
Acker, M.
This study assessed some ways in which schools, neighborhoods, nuclear families, and friendship groups jointly contribute to positive change during early adolescence. For each context, existing theory was used to develop a multiattribute index that should promote successful development.
2002
Cook, T. D.
Herman, M. R.
Phillips, M.
Settersten, Jr.
R. A.
An assessment of ways in which school, neighborhood, nuclear family, and friendship group contexts jointly contribute to positive change during early adolescence was conducted. Middle school students, parents, teachers, and staff from one county bordering with Washington D.C.
2002
Cook, T. D.
Herman, M. R.
Phillips, M.
Settersten, Jr.
R. A.
This article analyzes data from the National Educational Longitudinal Study of 1988 to test the effect of participation in extracurricular activities on high school achievement. It also explores potential mediating mechanisms that link such participation to academic success.
2002
This article analyzed data from the National Educational Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NELS:88) to test the effect of participation in extracurricular activities on high school achievement. It also explored potential connections that linked such participation to academic success.
2002