Ankita Patnaik, Michael Levere, Gina Livermore, Arif Mamun, Jeffrey Hemmeter
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: PROMISE was a federal initiative to support youth receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI) during the transition to adulthood.
Objectives: This article presents estimates of the impacts of the six PROMISE projects on youth and family outcomes as of 18 months after enrolling in PROMISE.
Research design: The study uses a randomized controlled trial design.
Subjects: The six PROMISE projects each enrolled a minimum of 2000 treatment and control youth (and their parents) residing in their service areas who were aged 14 to 16 and receiving SSI.
Measures: We estimated impacts on outcomes related to youth and family service use, school enrollment, training, employment, earnings, and federal disability program participation using survey and administrative data.
Results: The projects succeeded in connecting more youth to transition services and more families to support services during the 18 months after enrollment, and most increased the likelihood that youth applied for state vocational rehabilitation services. On average, there was no impact on youth's school enrollment, but there were favorable impacts on youth's receipt of job-related training, employment, earnings, and total income. The projects did not affect parents' employment, earnings, or income, on average. For most outcomes PROMISE affected, the impacts varied substantially across the projects.
Conclusions: The positive short-term impacts of PROMISE on youth's use of transition services, youth employment, and families' use of services are consistent with the program logic model and suggest there might be potential for longer-term favorable impacts on youth and family outcomes.
期刊介绍:
Evaluation Review is the forum for researchers, planners, and policy makers engaged in the development, implementation, and utilization of studies aimed at the betterment of the human condition. The Editors invite submission of papers reporting the findings of evaluation studies in such fields as child development, health, education, income security, manpower, mental health, criminal justice, and the physical and social environments. In addition, Evaluation Review will contain articles on methodological developments, discussions of the state of the art, and commentaries on issues related to the application of research results. Special features will include periodic review essays, "research briefs", and "craft reports".