Abstract
ABSTRACT A summary of important findings from the School Health Education Evaluation (SHEE) are reported. This paper focuses on the four principal outcome scores of Overall Knowledge, Attitude, Practice, and Program‐Specific Knowledge. The relationship of those scores to measures of program implementation and cost also is described. A consistent pattern of findings emerged across the participating health instruction programs, suggesting that health instruction was effective in meeting program objectives as taught in the study classrooms, and that school health program effectiveness was strongly related to the level of implementation. Significant increases in Overall Knowledge and Program‐Specific Knowledge were found for treatment classrooms when compared with control classrooms. Smaller, yet statistically significant, increases were found for attitudes and self‐reported practices. Curriculum implementation measures were related to program effectiveness. A higher level of program implementation produced greater increases in all scores, but was most strongly related to improvement in attitudes and self‐reported practices. Analysis of cost data revealed wide variation across the program. Implementation costs (those associated directly with the number of classroom instruction hours) accounted for more than 90% of the total costs and were, in turn, related to program effectiveness. Analysis of effects‐to‐classroom hours revealed that, while relatively few hours of instruction can produce large effects for knowledge, more hours are required for the development of attitude and practice effects, and that stable effects are established for all three domains at about 40–50 classroom hours.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Preventing Tobacco and Alcohol Use Among Elementary School Students Through Life Skills Training
ABSTRACT The present study examined the effectiveness of a substance abuse prevention program in preventing tobacco and alcohol use among elementary school students in grades 3 ...
Evaluation of a Tobacco and Alcohol Abuse Prevention Curriculum for Adolescents
This study examined the effectiveness of a tobacco and alcohol prevention program that was delivered to sixth and seventh grade students by minimally trained classroom teachers....
Prior Beliefs and Cognitive Change in Learning to Teach
This is a report of the first year of a longitudinal study to investigate changes in preservice teachers’ knowledge and beliefs about reading instruction before, during, and aft...
Resolving conflictcreatively: Evaluating the developmental effects of a school-based violence prevention programin neighborhood and classroom context
This study evaluated the short-term impact of a school-based violence prevention initiative on developmental processes thought to place children at risk for future aggression an...
The contributions of co-occurring forms of classroom discourse and academic activities to curriculum events and instruction.
How do academic activities and discourse work together in classrooms to shape learning and instruction? This complex question was answered in a case study of underachieving stud...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1985
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 55
- Issue
- 8
- Pages
- 316-321
- Citations
- 359
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1111/j.1746-1561.1985.tb05656.x