Integrated Models of School-based Prevention: Logic and Theory

Date Published:
Source
Psychology in the Schools
Authors:
Domitrovich, C.E.; Bradshaw, C.P.; Greenberg, M.T.; Embry, D.; Poduska, J.M.; Ialongo, N.S.
Volume
47
Issue
1
Page Numbers
71-88

School-based prevention programs can positively impact a range of social, emotional, and behavioral outcomes. Yet the current climate of accountability pressures schools to restrict activities that are not perceived as part of the core curriculum. Building on models from public health and

prevention science, we describe an integrated approach to school-based prevention. These models leverage the most effective structural and content components of social-emotional and behavioral health prevention interventions. Integrated interventions are expected to have additive and synergistic effects that result in greater impacts on multiple student outcomes. Integrated programs are

also expected to be more efficient to deliver, easier to implement with high quality and integrity, and more sustainable. We provide a detailed example of the process through which the PAX-Good Behavior Game and the Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies (PATHS) curriculum were integrated into the PATHS to PAX model. Implications for future research are proposed.