Child Development Clinical Trial
Official title:
How to Talk so Kids Will Listen & Listen so Kids Will Talk: A Randomized Controlled Trial Assessing the Impact of the French Workshop Format in the General Population
The objectives of the How-to parenting program are 1) to improve optimal parenting style, and 2) to foster children mental health (i.e. decrease in internalized and externalized problems, and well-being). The investigators expect that parents assigned to experimental groups will show improvements in parenting over time (i.e improvements in parental affiliation, parental structure and parental attitude toward autonomy), whereas parents in control groups will not show such improvements (i.e., stable or declining parenting quality). The investigators also expect children of parents in experimental groups to experience improvements in child mental health (i.e., fewer internalized and externalized psychological problems and increased well-being), whereas children whose parents are on the wait list will not show improvements over time (i.e., stable or deteriorating mental health and well-being).
Raising children is a fundamental yet challenging task. While parents are highly invested in
their children's development, they also have a vast influence on it. Indeed, among
environmental factors, the most widely accepted predictor of children mental health is
parenting quality. Research has shown that optimal parenting is composed of three key
dimensions: structure, autonomy support, and affiliation (vs. permissiveness, psychological
control, rejection). For parents, providing all three key "nutriments" is not necessarily
natural or easy. Indeed, it can be challenging to (1) require children to adopt socially
desirable behaviors (2) without thwarting their need for self-determination, (3) while
preserving a positive parent-child relationship. In addition, available parenting resources
(e.g., diverse parenting books) are sometimes contradictory, abstract, and rarely tap all
three important parenting dimensions. Providing the general population with concrete and
complete parenting education is essential in helping parents with their important yet
challenging role.
The goal of the proposed research is to evaluate a parenting program (i.e., How-to program)
that addresses all three key dimensions of optimal parenting. This program is congruent with
basic developmental research and with knowledge from decades of motivation research devoted
to autonomy support and self-determination theory. The objectives of the How-to parenting
program are 1) to improve optimal parenting style, and 2) to foster children mental health
(i.e. decrease child' internal and external problems, and increase child' well-being). The
investigators expect that parents assigned to experimental groups will show improvements in
parenting over time, whereas parents in control groups will not show such improvements (i.e.,
stable or declining parenting quality). The investigators also expect children of parents in
experimental groups to experience improvements in mental health, whereas children whose
parents are on the wait list will not show improvements over time (i.e., stable or
deteriorating mental health and well-being).
The research team will recruit participants and conduct the study in four schools per year,
during four years. The How-to parenting program will be offered to parents of grade school
children (5 to 12 years old). Grade schools will be recruited through Montreal school boards.
Only one parent per family may participate in the study. If parents have more than one child
in grade school, they will be asked to identify the one who is closest to 9 years of age and
then answer questionnaires about this "targeted" child. The seven-week parenting program will
be offered to the experimental groups (one per school) each spring (Years 1 to 4). Each of
these 4 experimental groups will be paired with a wait list control group from the same
school. Parents from these control groups will be offered the program the following year
(Years 2 to 5). In total, 256 parents from different families (mothers or fathers) will be
recruited in participating schools (16 parents [8 in experimental group + 8 in control group]
in each of 4 schools, for 4 years). This sample size was chosen to achieve adequate power,
while keeping the study feasible given participation rate.
The How-to program highlights the importance of structure and teaches parents how to provide
it. Parents learn how to communicate expectations, give feedback, follow through with logical
consequences and use problem solving for recurrent problems. In addition, the program
perfectly captures what it means to be autonomy-supportive. Moreover, this style helps
children feel better about the rules and about themselves. These new skills empower parents
to exert their authority with confidence and, importantly, without guilt. Parents are then
more apt at providing structure effectively and consistently. With the How-to Parenting
program, parents learn how to listen and respond to their children in a way that helps
children feel loved and accepted for who they are.
The How-to parenting program consists of seven 2 ½-hour weekly sessions. It is a manual-based
program in which participants have their own exercise booklet containing parenting skills and
exercises. Groups are led by 2 group leaders and formed of 6 to 10 parents. The format of
this program optimizes learning by (1) linking group content with parents' needs, (2)
facilitating awareness with perspective taking activities, (3) offering concrete parenting
skills, (4) modeling the skills and providing practice in a predictable and non-judgmental
environment, (5) emphasizing the importance of implementing these skills at home for long
term behavioral change, and (6) offering tools (i.e., exercise booklet, skill summary) that
facilitate information retention.
All parents and children will complete the same questionnaires before randomization
(baseline), after the seven-week program (post-test), and again at 6-month and 1-year follow
ups to assess change over time. Data will also be collected from targeted children's
teachers. These teacher reports will be collected at school, at each assessment point. At
follow ups, teacher reports will be provided by participating children's new teachers (i.e.,
in October and April of the 2nd school year). All measures (except for the control variables)
are included at all four assessment times to allow change measurement. The investigators will
adopt an intent-to-treat approach, as this approach increases external and internal validity.
Parenting style measures were reviewed and selected to best reflect recent conceptualizations
of the three key parenting dimensions and to do so with the least overlap. Affiliation
(Parental Bonding Instrument), structure (Parenting Scale), and attitude toward autonomy
(How-to Parenting Skill Scale; Parental Autonomy Support Scale (P-PASS)) are assessed by
parents and children. Child mental health will be assessed using a multi-source approach
(parent, teacher and child reports). Parents will rate their child's internalized and
externalized psychological problems (Child Behavior Checklist; CBCL). Teachers are asked to
evaluate children's classroom and social problems (Teacher-Child Rating Scale; TCRS). The
problem subscales of the TCRS assess internalized (I-) and externalized-(E-) problems.
Teachers will also complete the competencies subscales of the TCRS, which evaluate
socio-emotional competencies (i.e., frustration tolerance, task orientation and social
skills).
In the present data, baseline, post-test, and 6-month and 1-year follow up measures are
nested within a parent, who are nested within a parenting group. To evaluate change over
time, the four assessment points (baseline, post-test, 6-month follow up, and 12-month follow
up) will be treated as repeated measures using a piecewise growth hierarchical linear
modelling (HLM). These analyses are chosen because they model change between each subsequent
time points, which allows for rates of change to differ across time. HLM models are
recommended for intervention studies in order to capture rates of change both in the
intervention period and in the follow up periods. The effect of the parenting program will be
evidenced by significant interactions between rates of change and experimental conditions.
These interactions should reveal that optimal parenting components (H1) and child mental
health indicators (H2) increase over time for participants in the experimental condition, but
not for participants in the control group.
By including all three dimensions of optimal, authoritative parenting, the How-to program
stands in contrast to the majority of existing parenting training programs. In general, most
interventions target children already showing behavioral problems or considered at risk and
focus on behavior management strategies such as planned ignoring or reinforcement. Results
from a recent meta-analysis provide support for the adoption of a program that encompasses
all of the three essential dimensions of optimal parenting. Indeed, results showed that
programs' components that were predictive of larger effects pertained to autonomy support,
affiliation and structure. Though no formal evaluation of the How-to program has been made,
one early study suggested that it was associated with better familial climate and parenting
practices.
This proposal is a first step toward implementing and evaluating a parenting program tailored
to the promotion of children's mental health. By improving parenting, it can ameliorate
children's life-course trajectories, thereby reducing mental health problems and their
associated costs. By offering parenting groups, this research project includes a significant
knowledge transfer component that will directly impact parents enrolled in the program.
Dissemination of findings will be made in schools, by giving school principals, teachers and
parents an easy-to-read summary of results. If the present randomized controlled trial and
following replication trials are successful, a wider dissemination/evaluation trial will be
implemented, making the program widely available to parents.
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