The purpose of this study is to determine if a new substance use prevention curriculum for rural middle schools is effective in reducing substance use and to study how prevention curriculum get implemented by teachers.
The goals of the proposed study are to conduct an effectiveness trial of the keepin' it REAL (refuse, explain, avoid, leave) middle school substance use prevention curriculum among a new target audience in rural Pennsylvania and Ohio, describe how teachers adapt the curriculum when they present it, and develop, implement, and evaluate a Pennsylvania/Ohio-version of the curriculum to test whether an evidence-based universal curriculum can be improved by adapting it to local cultures. keepin' it REAL is recognized as a "model program" by SAMHSA's (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration's) National Registry of Effective programs and is one of the few that are multicultural. The study will evaluate the effectiveness of the original curriculum, grounded in the cultures of the southwest and compare that to a new version, "re-grounded" in the rural culture of Pennsylvania and Ohio, while studying how teachers adapt both versions. This proposal responds to NIDA (National Institute on Drug Abuse) PA-05-118 (Program Announcement), Drug Abuse Prevention Intervention Research that calls for investigations addressing, "1) the development of novel drug abuse prevention approaches; 2) the efficacy and effectiveness of newly developed and/or modified prevention programs; 3) the processes associated with the selection, adoption, adaptation, implementation, sustainability, and financing of empirically validated interventions." This proposal addresses all three points. A randomized control trial will be conducted in middle schools to accomplish these goals. First, formative research will be conducted to develop a rural Pennsylvania/Ohio-version of the curriculum. Second, 39 rural schools will be randomly assigned to one of three conditions: teacher adaptation in which the original keepin' it REAL curriculum is implemented; researcher adaptation in which a new Pennsylvania-version of the curriculum is implemented, and a control group. We hypothesized the participation in either form of the curriculum will reduce drug use and that the researcher adaptation will produce better outcomes and less teacher adaptation than the teacher adaptation. A pretest will be administered followed by post-tests in 7-9th grades. Adaptation and fidelity will be measured in 3 ways: teachers completing a Program Quality and Adaptation online measure after each lesson, videotaped lessons, and attendance. The major hypothesis tests will be conducted using variants of the general linear model, taking into account the multilevel structure of the data, test of a mediation model, and growth modeling.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
2,827
keepin' it REAL consists of 10 classroom lessons implemented in 7th grade and 4 booster sessions implemented in 8th grade by the classroom teacher following training
keepin' it REAL rural drug prevention curriculum consists for 10 lessons taught in 7th grade and 4 booster sessions taught in 8th grade.
control group continues to teach whatever prevention curriculum they were using prior to study
The Ohio State University
Columbus, Ohio, United States
The Pennsylvania State University
University Park, Pennsylvania, United States
Recent use of alcohol
Self report measure of recent use of alcohol
Time frame: 30 days
Recent use of tobacco
Self report measure
Time frame: 30 days
Recent use of marijuana
Self report
Time frame: 30 days
Perceptions of number of peers using drugs
Self report
Time frame: 2 years
Perception of self efficacy resisting drug offers
Self report measure
Time frame: 2 years
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