Using Complier Average Causal Effect Estimation to Determine the Impacts of the Good Behavior Game Preventive Intervention on Teacher Implementers

[1]  Patricia A. Jennings,et al.  Validation of the Mindfulness in Teaching Scale , 2016 .

[2]  Catherine P. Bradshaw,et al.  How Do School-Based Prevention Programs Impact Teachers? Findings from a Randomized Trial of an Integrated Classroom Management and Social-Emotional Program , 2016, Prevention Science.

[3]  Catherine P. Bradshaw,et al.  Individual and School Organizational Factors that Influence Implementation of the PAX Good Behavior Game Intervention , 2015, Prevention Science.

[4]  Catherine P. Bradshaw,et al.  What Affects Teacher Ratings of Student Behaviors? The Potential Influence of Teachers’ Perceptions of the School Environment and Experiences , 2014, Prevention Science.

[5]  Peter Z. Schochet,et al.  Understanding Variation in Treatment Effects in Education Impact Evaluations: An Overview of Quantitative Methods , 2014 .

[6]  Howard S. Bloom,et al.  A Conceptual Framework for Studying the Sources of Variation in Program Effects , 2013 .

[7]  C. Stanger,et al.  Parent training plus contingency management for substance abusing families: a Complier Average Causal Effects (CACE) analysis. , 2011, Drug and alcohol dependence.

[8]  Allison A Payne,et al.  The Relative Importance of Provider, Program, School, and Community Predictors of the Implementation Quality of School-Based Prevention Programs , 2010, Prevention Science.

[9]  Catherine P. Bradshaw,et al.  Longitudinal Impact of Two Universal Preventive Interventions in First Grade on Educational Outcomes in High School. , 2009, Journal of educational psychology.

[10]  Scott D. Gest,et al.  Individual Factors Associated With Professional Development Training Outcomes of the Head Start REDI Program , 2009, Early education and development.

[11]  Catherine P. Bradshaw,et al.  Altering School Climate through School-Wide Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports: Findings from a Group-Randomized Effectiveness Trial , 2009, Prevention Science.

[12]  David S. Cordray,et al.  Moving From the Lab to the Field: The Role of Fidelity and Achieved Relative Intervention Strength , 2009 .

[13]  Catherine P. Bradshaw,et al.  The impact of school-wide positive behavioral interventions and supports (PBIS) on the organizational health of elementary schools. , 2008 .

[14]  E. Stuart,et al.  Estimating Intervention Effects of Prevention Programs: Accounting for Noncompliance , 2008, Prevention Science.

[15]  Susan Main,et al.  Best Practice or Most Practiced? Pre-service Teachers' Beliefs about Effective Behaviour Management Strategies and Reported Self-efficacy , 2008 .

[16]  Wei Wang,et al.  Effects of a universal classroom behavior management program in first and second grades on young adult behavioral, psychiatric, and social outcomes. , 2008, Drug and alcohol dependence.

[17]  Joshua M. Cowen School Choice as a Latent Variable: Estimating the “Complier Average Causal Effect” of Vouchers in Charlotte , 2008 .

[18]  J. Durlak,et al.  Implementation Matters: A Review of Research on the Influence of Implementation on Program Outcomes and the Factors Affecting Implementation , 2008, American journal of community psychology.

[19]  Tihomir Asparouhov,et al.  Cluster randomized trials with treatment noncompliance. , 2008, Psychological methods.

[20]  Carol L. O'Donnell Defining, Conceptualizing, and Measuring Fidelity of Implementation and Its Relationship to Outcomes in K–12 Curriculum Intervention Research , 2008 .

[21]  Catherine P. Bradshaw,et al.  Maximizing the Implementation Quality of Evidence-Based Preventive Interventions in Schools: A Conceptual Framework , 2008, Advances in school mental health promotion.

[22]  T. Dishion,et al.  An adaptive approach to family intervention: linking engagement in family-centered intervention to reductions in adolescent problem behavior. , 2007, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[23]  Michael E. Sobel,et al.  What Do Randomized Studies of Housing Mobility Demonstrate? , 2006 .

[24]  Susan S. Han,et al.  Sustainability of Teacher Implementation of School-Based Mental Health Programs , 2005, Journal of abnormal child psychology.

[25]  P. Brounstein,et al.  Estimating Intervention Effectiveness: Synthetic Projection of Field Evaluation Results , 2005, Journal of Primary Prevention.

[26]  Anthony S. Bryk,et al.  Finding a Measure of Trust@@@Trust in Schools: A Core Resource for Improvement , 2004 .

[27]  Donald B. Rubin,et al.  Principal Stratification Approach to Broken Randomized Experiments , 2003 .

[28]  K. Hoagwood,et al.  Context Matters: Schools and the “Research to Practice Gap” in Children's Mental Health , 2003 .

[29]  Booil Jo,et al.  Estimation of Intervention Effects with Noncompliance: Alternative Model Specifications , 2002 .

[30]  Roderick J. A. Little,et al.  Statistical Analysis with Missing Data: Little/Statistical Analysis with Missing Data , 2002 .

[31]  D. Rubin,et al.  Principal Stratification in Causal Inference , 2002, Biometrics.

[32]  Jeanne M. Poduska,et al.  The Distal Impact of Two First-Grade Preventive Interventions on Conduct Problems and Disorder in Early Adolescence , 2001 .

[33]  N. Ialongo,et al.  Proximal Impact of Two First-Grade Preventive Interventions on the Early Risk Behaviors for Later Substance Abuse, Depression, and Antisocial Behavior , 1999, American journal of community psychology.

[34]  M. Greenberg,et al.  Promoting emotional competence in school-aged children: The effects of the PATHS curriculum , 1995, Development and Psychopathology.

[35]  G. Botvin,et al.  Long-term follow-up results of a randomized drug abuse prevention trial in a white middle-class population. , 1995, JAMA.

[36]  Joshua D. Angrist,et al.  Identification of Causal Effects Using Instrumental Variables , 1993 .

[37]  J. Graham,et al.  Diffusion of a school-based substance abuse prevention program: predictors of program implementation. , 1993, Preventive medicine.

[38]  P. Holland Statistics and Causal Inference , 1985 .

[39]  David F. Champion,et al.  Maslach Burnout Inventory , 1984 .

[40]  Subir Ghosh,et al.  Missing Data , 2020, Definitions.

[41]  Karen A. Blase,et al.  Implementation research: A synthesis of the literature (No. 231). University of South Florida, Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Implementation Research Network. , 2012 .

[42]  Allison B. Dymnicki,et al.  The impact of enhancing students' social and emotional learning: a meta-analysis of school-based universal interventions. , 2011, Child development.

[43]  M. Greenberg,et al.  Grade level PATHS (Grades 1-2) , 2011 .

[44]  M. Greenberg,et al.  Grade level PATHS (Grades 3-5) , 2011 .

[45]  Catherine P. Bradshaw,et al.  INTEGRATED MODELS OF SCHOOL-BASED PREVENTION: LOGIC AND THEORY. , 2010, Psychology in the schools.

[46]  N. Ialongo,et al.  Using latent outcome trajectory classes in causal inference. , 2009, Statistics and its interface.

[47]  M. Greenberg,et al.  Building social and emotional competence: The PATHS curriculum. , 2006 .

[48]  K. Dodge,et al.  Initial impact of the Fast Track prevention trial for conduct problems: II. Classroom effects. Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group. , 1999, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[49]  R. Little,et al.  Statistical Techniques for Analyzing Data from Prevention Trials: Treatment of No-Shows Using Rubin's Causal Model , 1998 .

[50]  Huey-tsyh Chen Theory-driven evaluations , 1990 .