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Parent Curricula Implementer Focus Group Guide
Division of Violence Prevention
National Center for Injury Prevention and Control
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
SOURCE: Focus group questions were drawn from the work of Taylor and Stein (2008) in New York City from 2008 to 2010. Taylor B and N. Stein (2008). Dating Violence Prevention Programs in New York City Middle Schools: A Multi-Level Experiment. Grant 2008-MU-MU-0010 from the National Institute of Justice.
Do you work in the school or are you being brought into the school as an external implementer?
What is your role in the school or community?
Did you teach the curriculum to parents of both the 6th and 7th grades, or only one (which)?
How would you rate the parents’ level of engagement/interest overall?
(To start with, please rate from 1-10, with 10 being the highest level of interest/engagement).
How would you rate the parents’ level of engagement/interest with <insert particular activity/activities>?
Which activities/lessons worked the best? Why do you think?
Which activities/lessons were harder to get them involved in & why?
Did you notice a difference in how the 6th and 7th grade parents responded to the activities (if you taught parents of multiple grades)?
Do you think we should revise the activities/lessons for the parents of students in a particular grade?
What do you think the key concepts of the lessons/interventions are? Please just toss out some words/concepts….
Do you think these concepts (which ones?) were understood by the parents?
Describe any factors that enhanced the implementation of the session.
Describe any additional barriers or factors that disrupted the delivery of the session.
What are the key lessons you learned that could be shared to support replication and future implementation of this curriculum?
The following discussion questions are relevant to Implementers who are also present in the daily school community. Descriptive examples of any of the following are welcome.
Since completing the lessons/interventions, have you observed a change in students in your school/community along the following lines that might be attributed to Parenting Matters:
Exhibiting verbal or physical controlling and/or harassing behaviors?
Any differences in the interactions between male and female students?
A change in the frequency or substance of bystander interventions?
Greater willingness to discuss or to seek help (e.g., teachers/counselors/administrators/other students) about dating violence and/or harassment issues?
More broadly, do you think the lessons/interventions are responsible, either directly or indirectly, for any positive or negative changes in the students?
Is there anything in general that you would like to add about the whole experience of being part of the Dating Matters initiative? Feel free to comment either about the parent participants, or your experiences/perceptions/observations.
School ID number:
Date:
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Centers for Disease Control & Prevention |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-01-27 |