Social Behavior Clinical Trial
Official title:
Enlisting Peer Cooperation and Prosociality in the Service of Substance Use Prevention in Middle School
Students' cooperative and prosocial behavior is vital to their social and academic success and to the quality of a school's social environment. This project will evaluate an instructional technique that could benefit students and schools by encouraging higher levels of prosocial behavior among students and promoting social integration and inclusion, particularly for marginalized students. The instructional technique is called "cooperative learning" which involves students working in groups toward shared academic goals. Previous research indicates that cooperative learning promotes social acceptance and increases academic engagement and achievement. However, it has not been evaluated as a technique to reduce student behavioral problems and promote greater school safety. There is strong reason to believe that it will have these benefits, since cooperative learning brings together students from diverse social groups and provides them the opportunity to work together toward shared goals in a positive setting.
A key contributing factor to the initiation and escalation of substance use during early
adolescence is affiliation with deviant peers. These affiliations often arise when socially
isolated and rejected youth aggregate and reinforce substance use and other deviant activity
within the group (i.e., "deviant peer clustering"). Even though the field has developed a
number of efficacious prevention programs, few have demonstrated strong effects on deviant
peer clustering. Further, on a national level, substance use among adolescents continues to
be high, suggesting that a fresh approach to prevention with a renewed focus on the peer
context is needed to create a broad, sustainable public health impact.
Existing programs have proven difficult to disseminate with fidelity, often due to their
complex design or the significant expenditures required for curricula, materials, and
training. To realize broader public health benefits, an approach that integrates scientific
knowledge across domains must be applied to develop and test programs that address root
causes of youth substance use, are less complex and expensive to implement, are more flexible
and adaptable to local conditions, and once established, can spread.
This proposal represents an approach to prevention in which evolutionary theory provides a
unifying theoretical framework, which implies that diverse problems are due to social
environments that are unfavorable for the expression of prosocial behaviors, instead
eliciting a variety of self-oriented or exploitative behaviors. Systematic efforts to reduce
multiple problems among youth (e.g., substance use, risky sex, depression, academic failure,
etc.) need to look beyond the immediate issues to the social conditions that make the entire
range of problems more likely. Programs should focus on modifying key social environments to
nurture prosocial behavior and minimize the toxic or stressful conditions that give rise to
behavioral problems in youth.
The investigators propose to integrate a few simple, flexible, and powerful prevention
strategies that have proven value in establishing a social context conducive to positive peer
group development. This project will apply cooperative learning and behavioral kernels to
reduce social rejection and isolation, promote new friendships among youth from different
social groups, and encourage greater levels of prosocial behavior. This should create a
positive feedback loop in which the social and behavioral processes "amplify" one another to
bring significant change to the school social context, interrupting deviant peer clustering
and addressing a key root cause of escalations in substance use and related problem behavior.
With this approach, the investigators anticipate a simple, straightforward implementation,
greater sustainability, and opportunities for the program to spread through sharing of best
practices among teachers. This project will conduct a small-scale randomized controlled trial
involving 12 middle schools in the state of Oregon.
Aim 1a of the project is to evaluate the main effects of the program on both prosocial
behavior and substance use. The investigators will also examine effects on secondary
outcomes, including delinquent and high-risk sexual behavior, teasing and harassment,
depression, school attendance, and academic achievement. The project will include an
assessment of program fidelity, which will be incorporated into data analyses. Aim 1b of the
project is to explore links among peer rejection, prosocial behavior, and substance use over
time in an attempt to determine the direction of effects, which can inform both developmental
theory and future intervention design.
Aim 2 will evaluate social network changes as a mediator of intervention effects. The
investigators will use longitudinal social network analysis (RSiena) to examine a variety of
processes as mediators of effects, including deviant peer clustering. This analyses will
provide (1) fresh insight into the processes by which deviant peer groups form, how they
impact substance use and related problem behavior, and the ways in which prevention programs
may be able to counteract or interrupt these processes, (2) exploration of the social
mechanisms by which prosocial behavior is disseminated across a network, and (3) an
indication of whether the alteration of contextual norms in favor of prosocial behavior can
create a clustering process driven by prosocial behavior.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06071130 -
Emotion, Aging, and Decision Making
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03894930 -
Metta Meditation Training on Prosocial Behavior
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03488927 -
Development and Pilot Trial of an Intervention to Reduce Disclosure Recipients Negative Social Reactions and Victims Psychological Distress and Problem Drinking
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT04656990 -
SKIPping With PAX: An Integrated Gross Motor and Social-Emotional Skill Intervention
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03683056 -
Mental Health Prevention Among Preschool Children Effectiveness Study
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05124665 -
Interrupting HIV and TB Stigma in the Household in Uganda
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT02998164 -
Improving Outcomes Using Technology for Children Who Are DHH
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT04328350 -
Social Experiences of Adolescents and Young Adults With Cancer
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05520047 -
Long-term Quality of Life and Prognostic Factors in Severe COVID-19 Patients and Their Relatives
|
||
Completed |
NCT05619458 -
Effectiveness of a Mindfulness Program on Emotion Regulation Among Youth Attending an Alternative School
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02963194 -
Oxytocin Effects on Self and Other Processing
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05379959 -
Effects of Stimulants on Behavioral and Neural Markers of Social Motivation, Ability, and Neural Markers of Social Function
|
Early Phase 1 | |
Completed |
NCT05893589 -
The Impact of the Social Cognitive Theory Based Educational Program on Women-headed Households' Social Health : A Field Trial
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06246734 -
Companion Robotic Pets and Older Adults
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT06363331 -
Efficacy of the Social Cognition Rehabilitation Program E-motional Training in the Treatment of Patients With Substance-related Disorders
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03452670 -
Contemplative Well-being Apps for the Workplace
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03055273 -
SOCIABLE Seniors Optimizing Community Integration to Advance Better Living With ESRD
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02745431 -
Oxytocin Effects on Likeability After Being Liked or Disliked
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03510364 -
Subjective Social Status and Energy Balance
|
N/A | |
Withdrawn |
NCT04396470 -
tVNS in Children With Prader-Willi Syndrome
|
Phase 1/Phase 2 |