4.3 Article

Testing the Impact of the Whole-Day Good Behavior Game on Aggressive Behavior: Results of a Classroom-Based Randomized Effectiveness Trial

期刊

PREVENTION SCIENCE
卷 23, 期 6, 页码 907-921

出版社

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11121-022-01334-y

关键词

Good Behavior Game; Primary Prevention; Universal Prevention; Randomized Controlled Trial; Implementation; Aggressive Behavior

资金

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse [R01DA15409, R01DA019984]
  2. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [R21HD40051]
  3. [P30DA027828]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study reports on the third generation randomized field trial of the Good Behavior Game (GBG) in Baltimore elementary schools. The results show that GBG has a significant impact on reducing aggressive behavior in first-grade classrooms, especially in classrooms with higher quality implementation. There was also a modest but significant benefit for female students in low aggression class.
Three generations of developmental epidemiologically based randomized field trials of the Good Behavior Game (GBG) have been delivered to Baltimore elementary schools. With the collaboration of family and community partners, all three trials were directed at decreasing proximal targets of aggressive behavior and improving learning in first-grade classrooms with distal mental health and substance abuse outcomes. GBG is a group-contingent classroom behavior management strategy that promotes classmate/peer concern for each child's positive behavior by rewarding teams with below-criterion levels of aggressive, disruptive behavior. GBG targets early risk factors for the above distal outcomes: aggressive, disruptive behavior, family/school relationships, and school failure. Here, we report on the third-generation randomized prevention trial of the GBG (whole-day first grade program (WD)), including 12 elementary schools. WD enhanced the standard curriculum in the areas of classroom behavior management; academic instruction, particularly reading; and family-classroom partnerships. Using a within-school classroom randomized trial design, we: 1) evaluate the effectiveness of the WD program by sex and cohort and 2) measure variation in WD impact by the quality of teachers' behavior management practices. Data from 961 first graders were used in general growth mixture modeling that accounts for classroom randomization to identify distinct developmental trajectories of aggressive, disruptive behavior and GBG impact on these trajectories. In the chronic high aggression trajectory of males, ratings of aggression after WD implementation and to the end of third grade were significantly lower in the WD condition than in controls in classrooms with a higher WD dosage (Cohort 2) and especially in classrooms with higher quality of WD implementation. For females, we found a modest but significant benefit of GBG in the low trajectory class when cohorts were combined. Regarding policy implications, embedding GBG into the curricula in teacher's colleges could better support student learning and behavior. Clinical Trials Registration number: NCT00257088.

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