Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
Wyman Center, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Dev Psychopathol. 2021 May;33(2):647-657. doi: 10.1017/S0954579419001731.
This study evaluated a school-based intervention to enhance adolescent peer relationships and improve functional outcomes, building upon Ed Zigler's seminal contribution in recognizing the potential of academic contexts to enhance social and emotional development. Adolescents (N = 610) primarily from economically or racially/ethnically marginalized groups were assessed preintervention, postintervention, and at 4-month follow-up in a randomized controlled trial. At program completion, intervention participants reported significantly increased quality of peer relationships; by 4-month follow-up, this increased quality was also observable by peers outside of the program, and program participants also displayed higher levels of academic engagement and lower levels of depressive symptoms. These latter effects appear to have potentially been mediated via participants' increased use of social support. The potential of the Connection Project intervention specifically, and of broader efforts to activate adolescent peer relationships as potent sources of social support and growth more generally within the secondary school context, is discussed.
本研究评估了一项基于学校的干预措施,旨在增强青少年的同伴关系并改善其功能结果,这是建立在 Ed Zigler 开创性贡献的基础上的,他认识到学术环境有潜力促进社交和情感发展。在一项随机对照试验中,主要来自经济上或种族/民族上处于边缘地位的青少年(N=610)在干预前、干预后和 4 个月随访时进行了评估。在项目完成时,干预组参与者报告说他们的同伴关系质量显著提高;到 4 个月随访时,项目之外的同伴也观察到了这种质量的提高,而且项目参与者还表现出更高的学业参与度和更低的抑郁症状。这些后期效果似乎是通过参与者更多地利用社会支持而产生的。讨论了 Connection Project 干预措施的潜力,以及更广泛地努力激活青少年同伴关系作为支持和促进中学环境中社交和成长的有力源泉的潜力。