Persistence and Fadeout in the Impacts of Child and Adolescent Interventions
University of California, Irvine · Duke University
Abstract
Many interventions targeting cognitive skills or socioemotional skills and behaviors demonstrate initially promising but then quickly disappearing impacts. Our paper seeks to identify the key features of interventions, as well as the characteristics and environments of the children and adolescents who participate in them, that can be expected to sustain persistently beneficial program impacts. We describe three such processes: skill-building, foot-in-the-door and sustaining environments. We argue that skill-building interventions should target "trifecta" skills - ones that are malleable, fundamental, and would not have developed eventually in the absence of the intervention. Successful foot-in-the-door…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 172.19
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 176
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Psychological intervention
- Socioemotional selectivity theory
- Intervention (counseling)
- Psychology
- Cognitive skill
- Quality (philosophy)
- Cognition
- Developmental psychology