Working on Womanhood (WOW): A participatory formative evaluation of a community-developed intervention

•Bottom-up approach to formative evaluation can reduce the research-practice gap.•Participatory formative evaluation was used to refine a community-developed program.•Mental health outcomes and academic engagement improved for WOW participants.•WOW participants, parents, and school personnel reporte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Evaluation and program planning 2019-02, Vol.72, p.237-249
Hauptverfasser: Ford-Paz, Rebecca E., Crown, Laurel, Lawton, Kathryn, Goldenthal, Hayley, Day, Gail, Coyne, Claire A., Gill, Tara, Harris, Ngozi, Blakemore, Sheree, Cicchetti, Colleen
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container_start_page 237
container_title Evaluation and program planning
container_volume 72
creator Ford-Paz, Rebecca E.
Crown, Laurel
Lawton, Kathryn
Goldenthal, Hayley
Day, Gail
Coyne, Claire A.
Gill, Tara
Harris, Ngozi
Blakemore, Sheree
Cicchetti, Colleen
description •Bottom-up approach to formative evaluation can reduce the research-practice gap.•Participatory formative evaluation was used to refine a community-developed program.•Mental health outcomes and academic engagement improved for WOW participants.•WOW participants, parents, and school personnel reported high levels of satisfaction.•Community-academic collaboration builds intervention efficacy research-readiness. The well-documented disparities in availability, accessibility, and quality of behavioral health services suggest the need for innovative programs to address the needs of ethnic minority youth. The current study aimed to conduct a participatory, formative evaluation of “Working on Womanhood” (WOW), a community-developed, multifaceted, school-based intervention serving primarily ethnic minority girls living in underserved urban communities. Specifically, the current study aimed to examine the feasibility, acceptability, and initial promise of WOW using community-based participatory research (CBPR) and represented the third phase of a community-academic partnership. Qualitative and quantitative data were collected from 960 WOW participants in 21 urban public schools, as well as WOW counselors, parents, and school staff over the course of one academic year. Results demonstrated evidence of acceptability of WOW and noteworthy improvements for WOW participants in targeted outcomes, including mental health, emotion regulation, and academic engagement. Findings also indicated several challenges to implementation feasibility and acceptability, including screening and enrollment processes and curriculum length. Additionally, we discuss how, consistent with participatory and formative research, findings were used by program implementers to inform program improvements, including modifications to screening processes, timelines, curriculum, and trainings – all in preparation for a rigorous effectiveness evaluation.
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Acceptability
Access
Bottom-up approach
Community based action research
Community Relations
Community-based participatory research
Community-developed intervention
Curricula
Curriculum development
Data
Emotional regulation
Ethnic minority youth
Feasibility
Formative Evaluation
Girls
Health behavior
Health disparities
Health services
Health status
Initial promise
Learner Engagement
Medical screening
Mental health
Minority & ethnic groups
Participatory evaluation
Participatory research
Public schools
School based intervention
School-based mental health
Social-emotional learning
Underserved populations
Urban areas
Urban schools
Womanhood
Youth
title Working on Womanhood (WOW): A participatory formative evaluation of a community-developed intervention
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