Parents

Preventive Intervention for Preschoolers at High Risk for Antisocial Behavior: Long-Term Effects on Child Physical Aggression and Parenting Practices

Children whose siblings were adjudicated were at risk for antisocial behaviors. The preventive effect of the modified Incredible Years Series program was examined in the study by randomly assigning high-risk preschoolers and their parents into either an intervention group or a control group.

2008
Brotman, L. M.
Gouley, K. K.
Huang, K.
Rosenfelt, A.
O'Neal, C.
Klein, R. G.
Shrout, P.

Parenting Stress After Deployment in Navy Active Duty Fathers

Military fathers are being deployed, and leaving their families, for greater lengths of time and more frequently than ever before. The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of recent deployment on parenting stress in U.S. Navy fathers with young children.

2016
Yablonsky, A. M.
Yan, G.
Bullock, L.

Parenting Stress After Deployment in Navy Active Duty Fathers

Deployment is often a stressful time for military families, and U.S. Service members have been deployed more often and for longer periods of time since 2003 and the start of OIF. This study synthesizes 21 qualitative articles related to the process of deployment among military families.

2016
Yablonsky, A. M.
Yan, G.
Bullock, L.

Parent Training to Reduce Problem Behaviors Over the Transition to High School: Tests of Indirect Effects Through Improved Emotion Regulation Skills

Adolescent problem behaviors are costly for individuals and society. Promoting the self-regulatory functioning of youth may help prevent the development of such behaviors. Parent-training and family intervention programs have been shown to improve child and adolescent self-regulation.

2016
Mason, W. A.
January, S.-A. A.
Fleming, C. B.
Thompson, R. W.
Parra, G. R.
Haggerty, K. P.
Snyder, J. J.

Parent Training to Reduce Problem Behaviors Over the Transition to High School: Tests of Indirect Effects Through Improved Emotion Regulation Skills

Parent education programs are in general beneficial in reducing young people's problem behaviors. The Common Sense Parenting (CSP) and Common Sense Parenting Plus (CSP Plus) programs were offered to families with 8th graders, and the effects of the programs were compared to a control group.

2016
Mason, W. A.
January, S.-A. A.
Fleming, C. B.
Thompson, R. W.
Parra, G. R.
Haggerty, K. P.
Snyder, J. J.