Search

Your search keyword '"Flay, Brian R."' showing total 127 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Flay, Brian R." Remove constraint Author: "Flay, Brian R." Database Complementary Index Remove constraint Database: Complementary Index
127 results on '"Flay, Brian R."'

Search Results

1. Are Physical Activity Resources Understandable as Disseminated? A Meta-Analysis of Readability Studies.

2. Mechanisms of Influence on Youth Substance Use for a Social-Emotional and Character Development Program: A Theory-Based Approach.

3. Effects of Positive Action in Elementary School on Student Behavioral and Social-Emotional Outcomes.

4. How Do Discrimination and Self-Esteem Control Beliefs Affect Prosociality? An Examination Among Black and Latinx Youth.

5. Students as Prosocial Bystanders to Sexual Assault: Demographic Correlates of Intervention Norms, Intentions, and Missed Opportunities.

7. Control, Norms, and Attitudes: Differences Between Students Who Do and Do Not Intervene as Bystanders to Sexual Assault.

8. School, Friends, and Substance Use: Gender Differences on the Influence of Attitudes Toward School and Close Friend Networks on Cannabis Involvement.

9. Meeting the Challenges of Longitudinal Cluster-Based Trials in Schools: Lessons From the Chicago Trial of Positive Action.

10. A Mixed-Methods Approach Examining Illicit Prescription Stimulant Use: Findings From a Northern California University.

12. Can Universal SEL Programs Benefit Universally? Effects of the Positive Action Program on Multiple Trajectories of Social-Emotional and Misconduct Behaviors.

13. IT'S IN MY HOOD: UNDERSTANDING AFRICAN AMERICAN BOYS' PERCEPTION OF SAFETY IN THEIR NEIGHBORHOODS.

14. Effects of a School-Based Social-Emotional and Character Development Program on Health Behaviors: A Matched-Pair, Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial.

15. Effects of the Positive Action Program on Indicators of Positive Youth Development Among Urban Youth.

16. The Illicit Use of Prescription Stimulants on College Campuses.

17. Teachers' Perceptions of School Organizational Climate as Predictors of Dosage and Quality of Implementation of a Social-Emotional and Character Development Program.

18. Commentary on the 2015 SPR Standards of Evidence.

19. A pilot evaluation of the Positive Action prekindergarten lessons.

20. CHAPTER 14: Bridging the Gap between Substance Use Prevention Theory and Practice.

21. Using Social-Emotional and Character Development to Improve Academic Outcomes: A Matched-Pair, Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial in Low-Income, Urban Schools.

22. Using the Community Readiness Model as an Approach to Formative Evaluation.

23. SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL AND CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT SCALE.

24. Development and Psychometric Properties of a Theory-Guided Prescription Stimulant Misuse Questionnaire for College Students.

25. Improving Elementary School Quality Through the Use of a Social-Emotional and Character Development Program: A Matched-Pair, Cluster-Randomized, Controlled Trial in Hawai'i.

26. Effects of a Social-Emotional and Character Development Program on the Trajectory of Behaviors Associated with Social-Emotional and Character Development: Findings from Three Randomized Trials.

27. Creating Nurturing Environments: A Science-Based Framework for Promoting Child Health and Development Within High-Poverty Neighborhoods.

28. Effects of the Positive Action programme on problem behaviours in elementary school students: A matched-pair randomised control trial in Chicago.

29. The impact of age and type of intervention on youth violent behaviors.

30. Evaluating Mediation in Longitudinal Multivariate Data: Mediation Effects for the Aban Aya Youth Project Drug Prevention Program.

31. Use of a Social and Character Development Program to Prevent Substance Use, Violent Behaviors, and Sexual Activity Among Elementary-School Students in Hawaii.

32. APPROACHES TO MEASURING IMPLEMENTATION FIDELITY IN SCHOOL-BASED PROGRAM EVALUATIONS.

33. Sustaining a School-Based Prevention Program: Results From the Aban Aya Sustainability Project.

34. School-based smoking prevention programs with the promise of long-term effects.

35. The promise of long-term effectiveness of school-based smoking prevention programs: a critical review of reviews.

36. School Climate and Teachers' Beliefs and Attitudes Associated with Implementation of the Positive Action Program: A Diffusion of Innovations Model.

37. Trajectories of smoking among freshmen college students with prior smoking history and risk for future smoking: data from the University Project Tobacco Etiology Research Network (UpTERN) study.

38. “Congratulations, You Have Been Randomized Into the Control Group!(?)”: Issues to Consider When Recruiting Schools for Matched-Pair Randomized Control Trials of Prevention Programs.

39. Working to make an image: an analysis of three Philip Morris corporate image media campaigns.

40. Protective Factors Associated with Preadolescent Violence: Preliminary Work on a Cultural Model.

41. Longitudinal Patterns of Daily Affect and Global Mood During Adolescence.

42. A National Survey of Tobacco Cessation Programs for Youths.

43. Consent Form Return Rates for Third-Grade Urban Elementary Students.

44. The Time-Varying Influences of Peer and Family Support on Adolescent Daily Positive and Negative Affect.

45. Recruitment and Retention of Adolescents in a Smoking Trajectory Study: Who Participates and Lessons Learned.

46. Adolescents' smoking expectancies: psychometric properties and prediction of behavior change.

47. A MEASUREMENT MODEL OF STUDENT CHARACTER AS DESCRIBED BY THE POSITIVE ACTION PROGRAM.

48. Historical Review of School-Based Randomized Trials for Evaluating Problem Behavior Prevention Programs.

49. EVALUATION OF THE EFFECTS OF THE ABAN AYA YOUTH PROJECT IN REDUCING VIOLENCE AMONG AFRICAN AMERICAN ADOLESCENT MALES USING LATENT CLASS GROWTH MIXTURE MODELING TECHNIQUES.

50. Identifying and predicting adolescent smokers' developmental trajectories.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources