NCT01323231

Brief Summary

The objective of this study is to build upon preliminary research and conduct a pilot feasibility randomized controlled trial on a promising culturally-grounded and gender-specific treatment program, the XY-Zone. The central hypothesis underlying this study purports that through receiving the XY-Zone treatment, adolescents will decrease their risk for dropping out of school. This hypothesis is supported by two years of preliminary data investigating the effectiveness of the XY-Zone. To test the central hypothesis, the following specific aims will be pursued:

  1. 1.Identify school dropout risk and protective factors (protective factors defined as: adult support and peer support; risk factors defined as: low school attendance, inability to achieve grade promotion, substance use, delinquency, school disconnectedness, misbehavior, disconnection from healthy peers) directly changed as a result of XY-Zone intervention.
  2. 2.Determine the extent to which moderating variables (affective strength, duration in the program, family functioning, interpersonal strength, intrapersonal strength, level achieved in the program, and resiliency) effect change in outcome variables (risk and protective factors).
  3. 3.Identify participants' beliefs about the impact of the mechanisms of change (respect, responsibility, relationship, role modeling, and reaching out) on outcome variables (risk and protective factors ) to enrich understanding of quantitative data.

Trial Health

87
On Track

Trial Health Score

Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach

Enrollment
91

participants targeted

Target at P75+ for phase_1

Timeline
Completed

Started Aug 2011

Geographic Reach
1 country

1 active site

Status
completed

Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.

Trial Relationships

Click on a node to explore related trials.

Study Timeline

Key milestones and dates

First Submitted

Initial submission to the registry

March 24, 2011

Completed
1 day until next milestone

First Posted

Study publicly available on registry

March 25, 2011

Completed
4 months until next milestone

Study Start

First participant enrolled

August 1, 2011

Completed
9 months until next milestone

Primary Completion

Last participant's last visit for primary outcome

May 1, 2012

Completed
Same day until next milestone

Study Completion

Last participant's last visit for all outcomes

May 1, 2012

Completed
Last Updated

July 10, 2013

Status Verified

July 1, 2013

Enrollment Period

9 months

First QC Date

March 24, 2011

Last Update Submit

July 8, 2013

Conditions

Keywords

XY-Zoneschool drop-out riskprotective factorstruancy

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcomes (3)

  • Youth Self Report

    The Youth Self Report (Achenbach, 1991) is a 112-item scale designed for ages 11-18 years. Items are rated on a three-point scale from 0=never to 2=always true in the past 6 months. Eleven subscales can be calculated from the data, including: withdrawn, somatic complaints, anxious/depressed, social problems, thought problems, attention problems, delinquent behavior, aggressive behavior, self-destructive, and internalizing and externalizing behaviors. Scoring of subscales is gender specific. Test-retest reliability has been shown to be good (r=.84-.91).

    One Year

  • Substance Use Self Report

    Self-report data on alcohol and other drug use will be collected through items adapted from the Adolescent DATOS survey, which was used with more than 3,000 adolescents (Kristiansen \& Hubbard, 2001; Hser, Grella, et al., 2001).

    One Year

  • School Records

    School records offer attendance, truancy, grades, grade promotion, and behavioral referral information.

    One Year

Secondary Outcomes (2)

  • Behavioral and Emotional Rating Scale- II (Youth Report)

    One Year

  • Resilience Scale

    One Year

Study Arms (1)

Communities in Schools Services

EXPERIMENTAL

Communities in Schools services include case management, mental health services, mentorship services, after school programs, and academic assistance.

Behavioral: XY-Zone

Interventions

XY-ZoneBEHAVIORAL

The XY-Zone works to empower students to decrease risk factors and increase protective factors through three linear treatment steps. The first step is driven by guiding principles known as the five R's: respect, responsibility, relationship, role modeling, and reaching out. Through these principles, the participant explores healthy psychosocial behaviors and thoughts in a structured 10 session group setting. The leadership step builds upon the guiding principles and employs activities exploring true leadership through 10 sessions. During the leadership step, participants organize and carry out a service learning projects in their community. The third and final step is ambassador. Those in the ambassador step become a mentor to those in step one and are "expected to explore the principles of leadership and the five R's, and determine their personal relevance to their lives as young men" (Allen, 2009, p. i).

Communities in Schools Services

Eligibility Criteria

Age13 Years - 20 Years
Sexmale
Healthy VolunteersNo
Age GroupsChild (0-17), Adult (18-64)

You may qualify if:

  • Students eligible to receive the XY-Zone must display one of the following risk factors:
  • academic risks (failed classes, failed state examination text, lack of class participation, and homework incompletion)
  • attendance risks (absences and tardies)
  • behavioral risks (gang involvement, substance use, classroom conduct, social skills, self-esteem, violence, delinquent conduct, and family or emotional crisis)and
  • social service issues (difficulty with the following: college readiness, life skills, health, career/employment, housing, day care, and grief or loss).

You may not qualify if:

  • Youth who do not display any of the identified risk factors

Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.

Sponsors & Collaborators

Study Sites (1)

Communities in Schools

Austin, Texas, 78704, United States

Location

Related Publications (9)

  • Allen, A. (2008). The XY-Zone project evaluation of Communities in Schools-Central Texas. Independent Outcome Evaluation.

    BACKGROUND
  • Achenbach, T.M. (1991). Manual for the Child Behavior Checklist/ 4-18 and 1991 Profile. Burlington, VT: University of Vermont Department of Psychiatry.

    BACKGROUND
  • Epstein, M.H., Mooney, P., Ryser, G., & Pierce, C.D. (2004). Validity and reliability of the behavioral and emotional rating scale (2nd edition): Youth rating scale. Research on Social Work Practice, 14, 358-367.

    BACKGROUND
  • Hser YI, Grella CE, Hubbard RL, Hsieh SC, Fletcher BW, Brown BS, Anglin MD. An evaluation of drug treatments for adolescents in 4 US cities. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2001 Jul;58(7):689-95. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.58.7.689.

    PMID: 11448377BACKGROUND
  • Kristiansen, P.L. & Hubbard, R.L. (2001). Methodological overview and research design for adolescents in the drug abuse treatment outcome studies. Journal of Adolescent Research, 16, 545-562.

    BACKGROUND
  • Wagnild GM, Young HM. Development and psychometric evaluation of the Resilience Scale. J Nurs Meas. 1993 Winter;1(2):165-78.

    PMID: 7850498BACKGROUND
  • Singer, J. D. and Willett, J. B. (2003). Applied longitudinal data analysis: Methods for studying change and event occurrence. New York: Oxford University Press.

    BACKGROUND
  • Creswell J.W. (2007). Qualitative inquiry and research design: Choosing among five approaches. 2nd ed. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

    BACKGROUND
  • Miles M.B. & Huberman, A.M. (1994). Making good sense: Drawing and verifying conclusions. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

    BACKGROUND

MeSH Terms

Conditions

Risk-Taking

Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)

Behavior

Study Officials

  • Katherine L Montgomery, PhD, MSSW

    Washington University in Saint Louis

    PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
  • David W Springer, PhD

    The University of Texas at Austin

    STUDY CHAIR

Study Design

Study Type
interventional
Phase
phase 1
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
NONE
Purpose
PREVENTION
Intervention Model
PARALLEL
Sponsor Type
OTHER
Responsible Party
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
PI Title
PhD

Study Record Dates

First Submitted

March 24, 2011

First Posted

March 25, 2011

Study Start

August 1, 2011

Primary Completion

May 1, 2012

Study Completion

May 1, 2012

Last Updated

July 10, 2013

Record last verified: 2013-07

Locations