19 results on '"Marion S. Forgatch"'
Search Results
2. Clinicians' Observations of Family Interactions in the Reunification Process: The Parent Child Checklist
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Thomas P. McDonald, Melanie M. Domenech Rodríguez, Marion S. Forgatch, Becci A. Akin, Yueqi Yan, David S. DeGarmo, and Springer Verlag
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validation ,050103 clinical psychology ,observation ,05 social sciences ,Context (language use) ,Checklist ,Confirmatory factor analysis ,Developmental psychology ,Inter-rater reliability ,Foster care ,Prosocial behavior ,Rating scale ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Reliability (statistics) ,reunification ,parent management training-Oregon ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
The present article employed a sample of 365 families of children in foster care to conduct a validation test of a newly developed instrument, the Parent Child Checklist (PCC). The PCC is a 54-item direct observation measure assessing parent–child interactions in the context of a family session. The PCC was developed to support the effective implementation of an evidence-based intervention, Parent Management Training-Oregon model, in the Kansas child welfare system. The PCC was designed to capture two scales of child behavior (prosocial and problem behavior) and five parenting domains (encouragement, positive involvement, problem solving, communication skill, and effective discipline). A combination of exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis was used in this first stage validation of the checklist. Results indicated the PCC scales obtained adequate internal consistency and interrater reliability. The confirmatory factor analysis supported 6 of the 7 expected scale domains; however, a two-factor solution was better - supported among the discipline items, labeled as effective and ineffective discipline. Test–retest reliability ranged from 0.45 to 0.80 across child behavior and parenting domains with alpha levels ranging from 0.65 to 0.88. A behavioral observation rating scale for clinicians that is reliable and feasible to implement can represent a significant improvement to practice-as-usual.
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- 2016
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3. Implementation and evaluation of linked parenting models in a large urban child welfare system
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Lisa Saldana, Patricia Chamberlain, Marion S. Forgatch, Sara Wolf Feldman, and Fred Wulczyn
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050103 clinical psychology ,Evidence-based practice ,Health Personnel ,Interprofessional Relations ,education ,Psychological intervention ,Social Workers ,Poison control ,Context (language use) ,Article ,Nursing ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,Parenting ,Social work ,business.industry ,Child Protective Services ,05 social sciences ,Health Plan Implementation ,Urban Health ,Public relations ,Private sector ,Organizational Innovation ,Organizational Policy ,United States ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Interinstitutional Relations ,Foster care ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Workforce ,Private Sector ,business ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
During the past decade, there have been increased efforts to implement evidence-based practices into child welfare systems to improve outcomes for children in foster care and their families. In this paper, the implementation and evaluation of a policy-driven large system-initiated reform is described. Over 250 caseworkers and supervisors were trained and supported to implement two evidence-based parent focused interventions in five private agencies serving over 2,000 children and families. At the request of child welfare system leaders, a third intervention was developed and implemented to train the social work workforce to use evidence-based principles in everyday interactions with caregivers (including foster, relative, adoptive, and biological parents). In this paper, we describe the policy context and the targeted outcomes of the reform. We discuss the theory of the interventions and the logistics of how they were linked to create consistency and synergy. Training and ongoing consultation strategies used are described as are some of the barriers and opportunities that arose during the implementation. The strategy for creating a path to sustainability is also discussed. The reform effort was evaluated using both qualitative and quantitative methods; the evaluation design, research questions and preliminary results are provided.
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- 2016
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4. Risk and Protective Factors Related to Fathers’ Positive Involvement and Negative Reinforcement With 1-Year-Olds
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Kristin Berg Nordahl, Marion S. Forgatch, and Imac Maria Zambrana
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Social Psychology ,Potential risk ,05 social sciences ,Direct observation ,Norwegian ,language.human_language ,Social relation ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Social coding ,050902 family studies ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,language ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0509 other social sciences ,Reinforcement ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
SYNOPSISObjective. Guided by a social interaction learning model, this study investigated potential risk and protective factors related to fathers’ early parenting behaviors. Design. Parenting behaviors in 726 Norwegian fathers with their 1-year olds (51.7% boys) were assessed by both micro social coding and global ratings from direct observation of structured interactions. Father and child factors were reported by fathers when the child was 6 months and 1 year old. Results. Fathers’ positive involvement was associated with children’s observed sustained attention, and lack of positive involvement was associated with children’s communicative risk and fathers’ lower education. Fathers’ negative reinforcement was associated with children’s developmental difficulties and communicative risk. Positive involvement and negative reinforcement were not correlated and were predicted by different factors, indicating they are separate dimensions of parenting. Conclusion. Multiple predictors relate to different parenti...
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- 2015
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5. Implementing an Evidence-Based Intervention for Children in Europe: Evaluating the Full-Transfer Approach
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Margrét Sigmarsdóttir, Abigail H. Gewirtz, Marion S. Forgatch, Edda Vikar Guðmundsdóttir, Örnólfur Thorlacius, Jolle Tjaden, Gøye Thorn Svendsen, School of education (UI), Menntavísindasvið (HÍ), Félagsvísindasvið (HÍ), School of Social Sciences (UI), Háskóli Íslands, and University of Iceland
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Male ,050103 clinical psychology ,Evidence-based practice ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Applied psychology ,Fidelity ,Child and adolescent ,Intervention (counseling) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,media_common ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Parenting ,05 social sciences ,Europe ,Clinical Psychology ,Sustainability ,Implementation ,GenerationPMTO ,Female ,Psychology ,Delivery of Health Care ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Objectives—This study evaluated implementation outcomes in three European countries of GenerationPMTO, an evidence-based parenting intervention for child and adolescent behavior problems. Method—The implementation approach was full transfer, in which purveyors train a first generation (G1) of practitioners; adopting sites assume oversight, training, certification, and fidelity assessment for subsequent generations (Forgatch & DeGarmo, 2011; Forgatch & Gewirtz, 2017). Three hundred therapists participated in trainings in GenerationPMTO in Iceland, Denmark, and the Netherlands. Data are from the implementation’s initiation in each country through 2016, resulting in six generations in Iceland, eight in Denmark, and four in the Netherlands. Therapist fidelity was measured at certification with an observation-based tool, Fidelity of Implementation Rating System (FIMP; Knutson, Forgatch, Rains, & Sigmarsdóttir, 2009). Results—Candidates in all generations achieved fidelity scores at or above the required standard. Certification fidelity scores were evaluated for G1 candidates, who were trained by the purveyor, and subsequent generations trained by the adopting implementation site. In each country, certification fidelity scores declined for G2 candidates compared with G1 and recovered to G1 levels for subsequent generations, partially replicating findings from a previous Norwegian study (Forgatch & DeGarmo, 2011). Recovery to G1 levels of fidelity scores was obtained in Iceland and the Netherlands by G3; in Denmark, the recovery was obtained by G5. The mean percentage of certification in each country was more than 80%; approximately 70% of certified therapists remained active in 2017. Conclusions—Findings support full transfer as an effective implementation approach with longterm sustainability and fidelity.
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- 2018
6. Treatment effectiveness of PMTO for children's behavior problems in Iceland: Assessing parenting practices in a randomized controlled trial
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Marion S. Forgatch, Margrét Sigmarsdóttir, David S. DeGarmo, and Edda Vikar Guðmundsdóttir
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Male ,Parents ,Iceland ,Poison control ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Models, Psychological ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Occupational safety and health ,law.invention ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Randomized controlled trial ,Behavior Therapy ,law ,Injury prevention ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Child ,General Psychology ,Parenting ,Human factors and ergonomics ,General Medicine ,Treatment Outcome ,Child, Preschool ,Parent training ,Female ,Observational study ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
FINDINGS are presented from an Icelandic randomized control trial (RCT) evaluating parent management training - Oregon model (PMTO™), a parent training intervention designed to improve parenting practices and reduce child behavior problems. In a prior report from this effectiveness study that focused on child outcomes, children in the PMTO condition showed greater reductions in reported child adjustment problems relative to the comparison group. The present report focuses on observed parenting practices as the targeted outcome, with risk by treatment moderators also tested. It was hypothesized that mothers assigned to the PMTO condition would show greater gains in pre-post parenting practices relative to controls. The sample was recruited from five municipalities throughout Iceland and included 102 participating families of children with behavior problems. Cases were referred by community professionals and randomly assigned to either PMTO (n = 51) or community services usually offered (n = 51). Child age ranged from 5 to 12 years; 73% were boys. Contrary to expectations, findings showed no main effects for changes in maternal parenting. However, evaluation of risk by treatment moderators showed greater gains in parenting practices for mothers who increased in depressed mood within the PMTO group relative to their counterparts in the comparison group. This finding suggests that PMTO prevented the expected damaging effects of depression on maternal parenting. Failure to find hypothesized main effects may indicate that there were some unobserved factors regarding the measurement and a need to further adapt the global observational procedures to Icelandic culture. Language: en
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- 2013
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7. Resurrecting the chimera: Progressions in parenting and peer processes
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Eric B. Richardson, Marion S. Forgatch, Katie Elish, Yvonne Chaw, Jasmine B. Harris, Michael R. Pauldine, James J. Snyder, and Gerald R. Patterson
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Family therapy ,Male ,Parents ,050103 clinical psychology ,Adolescent ,Early adolescence ,education ,Child Behavior ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Multiple methods ,Social class ,Peer Group ,Developmental psychology ,Divorce ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Juvenile delinquency ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,Socioeconomic status ,Parenting ,05 social sciences ,Peer group ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Social Class ,Child, Preschool ,Family Therapy ,Female ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology ,Social status - Abstract
This report uses 6-year outcomes of the Oregon Divorce Study to examine the processes by which parenting practices affect deviant peer association during two developmental stages: early to middle childhood and late childhood to early adolescence. The participants were 238 newly divorced mothers and their 5- to 8-year-old sons who were randomly assigned to Parent Management Training—Oregon Model (PMTO®) or to a no-treatment control group. Parenting practices, child delinquent behavior, and deviant peer association were repeatedly assessed from baseline to 6 years after baseline using multiple methods and informants. PMTO had a beneficial effect on parenting practices relative to the control group. Two stage models linking changes in parenting generated by PMTO to children's growth in deviant peer association were supported. During the early to middle childhood stage, the relationship of improved parenting practices on deviant peer association was moderated by family socioeconomic status (SES); effective parenting was particularly important in mitigating deviant peer association for lower SES families whose children experience higher densities of deviant peers in schools and neighborhoods. During late childhood and early adolescence, the relationship of improved parenting to youths' growth in deviant peer association was mediated by reductions in the growth of delinquency during childhood; higher levels of early delinquency are likely to promote deviant peer association through processes of selective affiliation and reciprocal deviancy training. The results are discussed in terms of multilevel developmental progressions of diminished parenting, child involvement in deviancy producing processes in peer groups, and increased variety and severity of antisocial behavior, all exacerbated by ecological risks associated with low family SES.
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- 2016
8. Cascading effects following intervention
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Marion S. Forgatch, Gerald R. Patterson, and David S. DeGarmo
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Adolescent ,Mothers ,Interpersonal communication ,Coercion ,Models, Psychological ,Standard of living ,Social Environment ,Article ,law.invention ,Developmental psychology ,Child Development ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Family ,Parent-Child Relations ,Child ,Parenting ,Mental Disorders ,Social environment ,Adolescent Development ,Child development ,Social relation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Four different sources for cascade effects were examined using 9-year process and outcome data from a randomized controlled trial of a preventive intervention using the Parent Management Training—Oregon Model (PMTO™). The social interaction learning model of child antisocial behavior serves as one basis for predicting change. A second source addresses the issue of comorbid relationships among clinical diagnoses. The third source, collateral changes, describes events in which changes in one family member correlate with changes in another. The fourth component is based on the long-term effects of reducing coercion and increasing positive interpersonal processes within the family. New findings from the 9-year follow-up show that mothers experienced benefits as measured by standard of living (i.e., income, occupation, education, and financial stress) and frequency of police arrests. It is assumed that PMTO reduces the level of coercion, which sets the stage for a massive increase in positive social interaction. In effect, PMTO alters the family environment and thereby opens doors to healthy new social environments.
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- 2010
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9. Efficacy of Parent Training for Stepfathers: From Playful Spectator and Polite Stranger to Effective Stepfathering
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David S. DeGarmo and Marion S. Forgatch
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Social Psychology ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Context (language use) ,Article ,Social relation ,Education ,law.invention ,Developmental psychology ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Parent training ,Psychology ,Construct (philosophy) - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The primary goal of this paper was to evaluate independent effects of stepfather parenting behaviors within the context of a parent training efficacy trial designed for recently married couples with children exhibiting behavior problems. A secondary goal was to examine measurement properties of a multiple-method, multiple-source construct of effective stepfathering including direct observation. Stepfather hypotheses were derived from a social interaction learning model of child adjustment and specifically evaluated the Oregon model of Parent Management Training (PMTO) intervention DESIGN: In a randomized control trial, 110 recently married families consisting of an early-elementary-school-aged focal child, biological mother, and stepfather were assessed over 2 years. Assessment included direct observation of stepfather - stepchild interactions. Analyses first tested intervention effects on change in stepfathering and second tested independent effects of stepfathering on change in children's depression and noncompliance at follow-ups. RESULTS: The intervention produced medium effect sizes at 6 and 12 months for improved stepfathering with parenting effects diminishing at 24 months. Hierarchical regression models showed that intervention group improvements in stepfathering predicted greater reductions in children's depression and noncompliance at 2 years relative to controls, controlling for change in mothering. CONCLUSIONS: These findings underscore the preventive utility of the PMTO intervention for stepfathers. Implications for research, translation, timing of intervention, and implementation are discussed.
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- 2007
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10. Early development of delinquency within divorced families: evaluating a randomized preventive intervention trial
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Marion S. Forgatch and David S. DeGarmo
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Adult ,Male ,Time Factors ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,education ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Models, Psychological ,Personality Assessment ,law.invention ,Developmental psychology ,Randomized controlled trial ,Behavior Therapy ,Divorce ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Juvenile delinquency ,Parenting styles ,Humans ,Family ,Child ,Problem Solving ,Child rearing ,Middle Aged ,Child development ,Mother-Child Relations ,Multivariate Analysis ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Linear Models ,Parent training ,Female ,Personality Assessment Inventory ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This paper reports on an experimental test of coercion theory early onset model of delinquency. Results are from the Oregon Divorce Study-II, a randomized preventive intervention trial with a sample of 238 recently separated mothers and their sons in early elementary school. The objective was to experimentally manipulate parenting variables hypothesized to influence development of delinquent behaviors. Multiple-method assessment spanned 36 months. Because the intervention focused on parent training, we expected that any intervention effects on changes in child outcomes would be mediated by hypothesized intervening mechanisms. Linear growth models showed significantly greater reduction in boys' delinquency and deviant peer affiliation in the experimental group relative to the controls. Subsequent models using no method overlap in constructs demonstrated that the intervention effect on delinquency operated through growth in parenting and reduction in deviant peer affiliation.
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- 2005
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11. Systematic Changes in Families Following Prevention Trials
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Marion S. Forgatch, Gerald R. Patterson, and David S. DeGarmo
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Adult ,Male ,Psychotherapeutic Processes ,Mothers ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Models, Psychological ,Systemic therapy ,Developmental psychology ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Parenting styles ,Humans ,Child ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Depressive Disorder ,Likelihood Functions ,Parenting ,Child rearing ,Social environment ,Middle Aged ,Pacific States ,Single Parent ,Mental health ,Self Efficacy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Panel analysis ,El Niño ,Multivariate Analysis ,Family Therapy ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
A selective prevention design was applied to 238 recently separated families. Of these, 153 mothers randomly assigned to the experimental (E) group participated in 14 group sessions focused on Parent Management Treatment (PMT). Prior analyses showed that, over time, the group of families in the untreated group deteriorated in both parenting practices and in child outcomes. In keeping with the classic prevention pattern, families in the E group showed modest improvements in parenting and in child outcomes. Improvements in parenting were associated with significant reductions in problem behavior. The data showed that those mothers who improved their parenting skills during the first 12 months also showed significant reductions in maternal depression during that same interval. A cross-lagged panel analysis showed that a reduction in maternal depression during the first year of the study was a significant predictor of maintenance or improvements over the next 18 months. The findings are consistent with the concept of the family as a system.
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- 2004
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12. Confidant support and maternal distress: Predictors of parenting practices for divorced mothers
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Marion S. Forgatch and David S. DeGarmo
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Emotional support ,Social Psychology ,Anthropology ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Parenting problems ,Negativity effect ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Association (psychology) ,Psychology ,Maternal distress ,Structural equation modeling ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Following divorce, mothers may seek support for their parenting efforts. This study investigates confidant support from friends, family, and intimate partners, along with maternal distress, as predictors of parenting practices for divorced women. In a multimethod study of 138 mothers and their support confidants, we employed a measure of observed support that included emotional support, supportive behaviors, and likability of the support provider. These qualities were scored from dyadic problem-solving discussions of the mother's personal and parenting problems. Our main hypothesis was supported: Controlling for maternal distress and confidant negativity, observed confidant support predicted higher levels of effective parenting practices. Confidant negativity was associated with maternal distress, and we found a marginal relationship between maternal distress and parenting. Confidant negativity had an indirect association with parenting by predicting lower levels of observed support. Overall, 36% of the variance in parenting practices and 24% of the variance in observed support was explained in a multimethod structural equation model specified with minimal overlap.
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- 1997
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13. Adult Problem Solving: Contributor to Parenting and Child Outcomes in Divorced Families
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Marion S. Forgatch and David S. DeGarmo
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Sociology and Political Science ,Macro level ,Social domain ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Context (language use) ,Marital separation ,Variance (accounting) ,Latent variable ,Psychology ,Social learning theory ,Outcome (game theory) ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
This cross-sectional study extends child outcome models by focusing on factors in the adult social domain as contributors to parenting. The sample included 138 divorced mothers, their focal sons, and their support confidants assessed approximately 5 years after marital separation. The multimethod latent variable analysis tested a hypothesized progression stating observed confidant support would enhance problem solving outcomes achieved by mothers and confidants. Resolving parenting and personal issues for the mother was expected to benefit parenting practices (i.e., monitoring, discipline, and mother/child problem solving), which in turn would predict a macro level measure of child antisocial behavior. Analysis of the simplex model supported the progression. The final model explained 36% of the variance in antisocial behavior, 15% of the variance in parenting, and 53% of the variance in problem solving outcome. Dyads with cohabiting partners scored higher on problem solving outcomes than did dyads with friends or family members. The model is discussed in the context of social interactional and social learning theory.
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- 1997
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14. Boosting Homework: A Video Tape Link Between Families and Schools
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Marion S. Forgatch and Elizabeth Ramsey
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Boosting (doping) ,Multimedia ,education ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Video tape ,Psychology ,computer.software_genre ,human activities ,computer ,Education - Abstract
This study examined effects of a self-administered video tape intervention designed to improve students' homework quality, promote parental involvement and support for children's homework efforts, ...
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- 1994
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15. Affective Expression in Family Problem-Solving Discussions with Adolescent Boys
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Deborah M. Capaldi, Lynn Crosby, and Marion S. Forgatch
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Affective behavior ,Secondary education ,Sociology and Political Science ,Family structure ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Self-esteem ,Anger ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Expression (architecture) ,Affection ,Conflict resolution ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Families who fail to stay problem-focused and instead resort to the exchange of negatively charged emotions during family problem-solving discussions tend to have more distressed adolescents and also fail to solve their disputes. The current study examined the role of 10 affects observed during family problem solving for an at-risk sample of approximately 200 boys and their parent(s). Affects were assessed at Grade 8 and at Grade 10 as part of an ongoing longitudinal study with extensive multimethod, multi-agent assessments. Stability of affect over the 2-year period as well as the relation of affect to problem-solving outcome, parent-adolescent relationship, and adolescent self-esteem was examined. Analyses were conducted by family structure (intact, single-mother, stepfather). Results provided evidence for the value of studying the role of a range of affects in family interaction andfor the predictive validity of observed affects duringfamily process.
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- 1994
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16. Testing the Oregon delinquency model with 9-year follow-up of the Oregon Divorce Study
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Marion S. Forgatch, Zintars G. Beldavs, David S. DeGarmo, and Gerald R. Patterson
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Family therapy ,Male ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,education ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Models, Psychological ,Peer Group ,Developmental psychology ,law.invention ,Interpersonal relationship ,Oregon ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Behavior Therapy ,Divorce ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Juvenile delinquency ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Longitudinal Studies ,Association (psychology) ,Child ,Parenting ,Peer group ,Single mothers ,Mother-Child Relations ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment Outcome ,Adolescent Behavior ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Parenting skills ,Family Therapy ,Psychology ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
This paper presents experimental tests of the Oregon delinquency model applied within a randomized design of an at-risk sample of single mothers and their elementary school-aged sons. In the theoretical model, ineffective parenting practices and deviant peer association serve as the primary mechanisms for growth in adolescent delinquent behavior and early arrests. Multiple-method assessments of 238 mothers and sons include delinquency as measured by teacher reports and official arrest records, parenting skills measured by observations of parent–child interactions, and deviant peer association as reported by focal boys. Analyses of the 9-year follow-up data indicate that the Oregon model of parent management training significantly reduced teacher-reported delinquency and police arrests for focal boys. As hypothesized, the experiments demonstrated that improving parenting practices and reducing contacts with deviant peers served as mediating mechanisms for reducing rates of adolescent delinquency. As predicted, there was also a significant delay in the timing of police arrests for youth in the experimental as compared to the control group.
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- 2009
17. Parenting of divorced mothers as a link between social status and boys' academic outcomes: unpacking the effects of socioeconomic status
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Charles R. Martinez, David S. DeGarmo, and Marion S. Forgatch
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Adult ,Male ,Protective factor ,Child Behavior ,Mothers ,Academic achievement ,Family income ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Divorce ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Child ,Socioeconomic status ,Problem Solving ,Child rearing ,Parenting ,Socialization ,Achievement ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Marital status ,Female ,Psychology ,Reinforcement, Psychology ,Social status - Abstract
Socialization theories posit parenting practices as mechanisms linking socioeconomic status (SES) and children's academic outcomes. A mediational parenting model was tested examining separate effects of maternal education, occupation, and income for a sample of 238 divorced or recently separated mothers of 6- to 9-year-old sons. For the SEM path models, each indicator of SES was associated with better parenting, and parenting in turn had indirect effects on achievement through home skill-building activities and school behavior. The direct effect of maternal education on achievement was mediated by home skill-building activities, the direct effect of maternal occupation on achievement was not mediated, and income measures had no direct effects on achievement. These findings underscore the importance of unpacking the effects of SES and the relevance of effective parenting practices as a protective factor in the home and school environment for young boys' school success during postdivorce adjustment.
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- 1999
18. Variables that initiate and maintain an early-onset trajectory for juvenile offending
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Karen Yoerger, Marion S. Forgatch, Gerald R. Patterson, and Mike Stoolmiller
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Male ,Adolescent ,Child Behavior ,Psychology, Child ,Models, Psychological ,Developmental psychology ,Cohort Studies ,Interpersonal relationship ,Oregon ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Juvenile delinquency ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychological testing ,Family ,Interpersonal Relations ,Parent-Child Relations ,Child ,Sequence (medicine) ,Early onset ,Psychological Tests ,Models, Statistical ,Antisocial personality disorder ,Antisocial Personality Disorder ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Trajectory ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Social disadvantage ,Psychology - Abstract
A trajectory defined by three time-ordered events was offered as a useful adjunct to building a development theory about antisocial behaviors. A sequence was defined with significant linkages between antisocial childhood behavior and early arrest and between early arrest and chronic offending. The majority of chronic offenders traveled through all three events in the sequence. Each event in the sequence shared a common process of disrupted family process plus frequent family transitions and marked social disadvantage. The findings support the hypothesis that the process that leads to antisocial behaviors at grade four may also maintain the entire sequence. The level of disrupted process at initiation and a time-based measure of involvement with deviant peers predicted which individuals moved forward in the sequence and which did not. The findings are consistent with the idea that the majority of chronic offending juveniles follow a trajectory that can be explained by a single theory.
- Published
- 1998
19. A Cost-Effective Parent Training Program for Use with Normal Preschool Children
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Marion S. Forgatch and Deborah J. Toobert
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Preschool child ,Cost effectiveness ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Time to treatment ,Parent training ,Psychology ,Developmental psychology - Published
- 1979
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