Whole-school interventions promoting student commitment to school to prevent substance use and violence, and improve educational attainment: a systematic review.

Ruth Ponsford, G J Melendez-Torres, Alec Miners, Jane Falconer, Chris Bonell
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Abstract

Background: Whole-school interventions modify the school environment to promote health. A subset of these interventions promotes student commitment to school to prevent substance (tobacco, alcohol, other drugs) use and/or violence. A previous review identified the theory of human functioning and school organisation as a comprehensive theory of such interventions, and found evidence that these interventions reduce substance use and/or violence.

Objectives: The objectives were to search for, appraise and synthesise evidence to address the following questions: (1) What whole-school interventions promoting student commitment to school to prevent substance use and/or violence have been evaluated, what intervention subtypes are apparent and how closely do these align with the theory of human functioning and school organisation? (2) What factors relating to setting, population and intervention affect implementation? (3) What are the effects on student substance use, violence and educational attainment? (4) What is the cost-effectiveness of such interventions? (5) Are intervention effects mediated by student commitment to school or moderated by setting or population?

Data sources: A total of 56 information sources were searched (in January 2020), then an updated search of 48 of these was carried out (in May 2021). Reference lists were also searched and experts were contacted.

Review methods: Eligible studies were process/outcome evaluations of whole-school interventions to reduce student violence or substance use among students aged 5-18 years attending schools, via actions aligning with the theory of human functioning and school organisation: modifying teaching to increase engagement, enhancing student-staff relationships, revising school policies, encouraging volunteering or increasing parental involvement. Data extraction and quality assessments used existing tools. Theory and process reports were synthesised qualitatively. Outcome and economic data were synthesised narratively; outcome data were meta-analysed.

Results: Searches retrieved 63 eligible reports on 27 studies of 22 interventions. We identified four intervention subtypes focused on student participation in school-wide decisions, improving staff-student relationships, increasing engagement in learning and involving parents. The theories of change of most intervention subtypes aligned closely with the theory of human functioning and school organisation, and informed refinement of an intervention theory of change. Theories of change for interventions increasing learning engagement did not align with this theory, aiming instead to increase school commitment primarily via social skills curricula. Factors influencing the implementation included whether or not interventions were tailorable, workable and well explained. Interventions with action groups comprising staff/students, etc. and providing local data were well implemented. Implementation was also affected by whether or not schools accepted the need for change and staff had the resources for delivery. Meta-analyses suggest small, but significant, intervention effects in preventing violence victimisation and perpetration, and substance use. There was sparse and inconsistent evidence of moderation and some evidence of mediation by student commitment to school. Two economic evaluations suggested that there is the potential for the interventions to be cost-effective.

Limitations: The quality of the studies was variable and the economic synthesis was limited to two studies.

Conclusions: Whole-school interventions aiming to promote student commitment to school share similar theories of change and factors affecting implementation. They have the potential to contribute to preventing violence and substance use among young people. Future trials should aim to optimise intervention effectiveness by better theorisation, and assess implementation and effect moderators and mediators.

Study registration: This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42019154334.

Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme (NIHR award ref: 17/151/05) and is published in full in Public Health Research; Vol. 12, No. 2. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

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通过全校干预促进学生对学校的承诺,以预防药物使用和暴力,并提高教育成就:系统性综述。
背景:全校干预改变了学校环境,以促进健康。这些干预措施的一个子集是促进学生对学校的承诺,以防止物质(烟草、酒精、其他药物)的使用和/或暴力。之前的一篇综述将人类功能和学校组织理论确定为此类干预措施的综合理论,并发现这些干预措施可减少药物使用和/或暴力的证据:目标:寻找、评估和综合证据,以解决以下问题:(1) 评估了哪些促进学生对学校的承诺以预防药物使用和/或暴力的全校干预措施,有哪些明显的干预措施子类型,这些措施与人的功能和学校组织理论的一致性如何?(2) 与环境、人群和干预措施有关的哪些因素会影响干预措施的实施?(3) 对学生药物使用、暴力和学业成绩有何影响?(4) 这些干预措施的成本效益如何?(5) 干预措施的效果是以学生对学校的承诺为中介,还是以环境或人群为调节?共搜索了 56 个信息来源(2020 年 1 月),然后对其中的 48 个进行了更新搜索(2021 年 5 月)。此外,还检索了参考文献列表并联系了专家:符合条件的研究是对全校干预措施的过程/结果评估,这些干预措施旨在通过与人类功能和学校组织理论相一致的行动,减少5-18岁在校学生的暴力或药物使用:修改教学以提高参与度、加强学生与教职员工的关系、修订学校政策、鼓励志愿服务或增加家长参与。数据提取和质量评估使用现有工具。对理论和过程报告进行了定性综合。对结果和经济数据进行叙述性综合;对结果数据进行荟萃分析:搜索检索到 63 份符合条件的报告,涉及 22 项干预措施的 27 项研究。我们确定了四种干预子类型,分别侧重于学生参与全校决策、改善师生关系、提高学习参与度和家长参与。大多数干预措施亚类型的变革理论与人类功能和学校组织理论密切相关,并为完善干预措施的变革理论提供了依据。提高学习参与度的干预措施的变革理论与这一理论并不一致,而是主要通过社会技能课程来提高学校的承诺。影响实施的因素包括干预措施是否有针对性、是否可行以及是否得到了充分的解释。由教职员工/学生等组成行动小组并提供当地数据的干预措施得到了很好的实施。学校是否接受变革的必要性以及教职员工是否拥有实施资源,也会影响干预措施的实施。元分析表明,干预措施在预防暴力受害和施暴以及药物使用方面的效果虽小,但意义重大。有关调节作用的证据稀少且不一致,还有一些证据表明,学生对学校的承诺会起到中介作用。两项经济评估表明,干预措施可能具有成本效益:局限性:研究质量参差不齐,经济综述仅限于两项研究:旨在促进学生对学校的承诺的全校干预措施具有相似的变革理论和影响实施的因素。这些干预措施有可能有助于预防青少年中的暴力和药物使用。未来的试验应旨在通过更好的理论化来优化干预效果,并评估实施和效果的调节因素和中介因素:本研究已注册为 PROSPERO CRD42019154334:该奖项由国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)公共卫生研究计划(NIHR奖项编号:17/151/05)资助,全文发表于《公共卫生研究》第12卷第2期。如需了解更多奖项信息,请访问 NIHR Funding and Awards 网站。
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