Interventions addressing incarcerated youth behavior: A review of literature.
Joseph Calvin GagnonElizabeth RuizSarup R MathurLoretta Mason-WilliamsPublished in: The American journal of orthopsychiatry (2022)
Many youth who are incarcerated have serious behavioral problems that negatively affect their ability to benefit from educational services. In the Guiding Principles for Providing High - Quality Education in Juvenile Justice Secure Care Settings published at the end of 2014, the U.S. Departments of Justice and Education address this issue in Principle 1, which asserts the importance of ensuring the safety and well-being of youth who are incarcerated. To address the research progress since publication of the Guiding Principles , ProQuest and Ebsco were systematically searched and a hand search was conducted. Ten intervention studies were identified that addressed youth behavior. The studies primarily employed a single subject research design and focused on increasing youth compliance and/or decreasing disruptive behaviors. Reviewed studies provide support for providing clear behavioral expectations and reminders, praise, and reinforcement, as well as cognitive-behavioral interventions. However, methodological limitations, including the lack of treatment integrity in nine of the studies, limit conclusions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).