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Volume 30, Issue 3: June, 2003
Abstract
Factors Associated With Fidelity to Substance Use Prevention
Curriculum Guides in the Nation’s Middle Schools
Christopher L. Ringwalt, DrPH, Susan Ennett, PhD, Ruby Johnson,
MA, Louise Ann Rohrbach, PhD,
Ashley Simons-Rudolph, BA, Amy Vincus, MPH, and Judy Thorne,
PhD
Teachers’ fidelity of implementation of substance use
prevention curricula is widely considered desirable and is
linked empirically to effectiveness. The authors examine factors
pertinent to teachers’fidelity to curricula guides,
using data from a nationally representative sample of 1,905
lead substance use prevention teachers in the nation’s
public and private schools. Findings suggest that about one-fifth
of teachers of substance use prevention curricula did not
use a curriculum guide at all, whereas only 15% reported they
followed one very closely. Positively associated with adherence
were teachers’ discretion in their coverage of prevention
lessons, beliefs concerning the effectiveness of the most
recent training they received and the curricula they taught,
and level of support they received from their principals for
substance use prevention. The authors conclude that some degree
of curriculum adaptation is inevitable and suggest how adherence
to curricula guides may be improved through teacher training.
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