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Dive into the research topics where David T. Lardier is active.

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Featured researches published by David T. Lardier.


Sociological focus | 2018

Adolescents’ Friends, Parental Social Closure, and Educational Outcomes

Brian V. Carolan; David T. Lardier

ABSTRACT There is a growing recognition of the importance of the social resources accessed through friends on adolescents’ educational outcomes. However, the research on the influence of these social resources remains inconclusive, due primarily to the different ways in which social resources have been conceptualized and measured. Using panel data from the Educational Longitudinal Study, we estimate the association between two measures of adolescents’ social resources in the Educational Longitudinal Study base-year, their high school grade point average in the first follow-up, and the likelihood of attaining a four-year college degree by the third follow-up. Grounded in the literature on social capital, our findings show that friendships that provide access to high social closure parental networks are favorably associated with grade point average and college completion. We discuss results in terms of their implications on school reform efforts intended to manufacture adolescents’ access to norm-reinforcing networks.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2018

Adult youth workers’ conceptions of their work in an under-resourced community in the United States

David T. Lardier; Kathryn Herr; Pauline Garcia-Reid; Robert J. Reid

ABSTRACT This study examined adult workers’ conceptions of their work with youth in a large, underserved, urban region in the northeastern United States. Drawing on qualitative interviews with 18 youth workers from various organizations, affiliated with a community coalition focused on substance abuse prevention, we explored how adults viewed their role of working with youth. We were particularly interested in whether these workers saw youth empowerment and collaboration with youth for community change as part of their role. Our data suggested that while workers in this study were very supportive of youth, the support and actions they provided were on behalf of rather than with them and that, in general, partnering with youth for community change was not a part of what they envisioned their work to be. While a few of the adults attempted to work more collaboratively with youth, they were clearly in the minority.


The Family Journal | 2018

Mindfulness as a Moderator of Clinician History of Trauma on Compassion Satisfaction

Ashley Martin-Cuellar; David J. Atencio; Ryan J. Kelly; David T. Lardier

Compassion satisfaction is an understudied phenomenon in the counseling literature. The impact of a clinician’s history of trauma on compassion satisfaction and potential protective factors that may enhance feelings of compassion satisfaction is equally understudied. This study aimed to address models of mindfulness as a protective factor for the associations between a clinician’s history of trauma and their experience with compassion satisfaction. The sample consisted of licensed clinicians (N = 113) reporting on their past history of trauma, dispositional mindfulness, and compassion satisfaction. Results indicated that mindfulness moderated the association between a clinician’s history of trauma and compassion satisfaction. Findings also show mindfulness to be significant in supporting a clinician’s experience with compassion satisfaction, overall. Therefore, mindfulness should be further considered as an important safeguard for clinicians to consider in order to continue to enjoy their work. Implications are considered for clinicians, counseling training programs, and agency employers.


Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse | 2018

Exposure to gangs in low-income urban communities and substance use among Hispanic youth

Autumn M. Bermea; David T. Lardier; Brad van Eeden-Moorefield; Pauline Garcia-Reid; Robert J. Reid

Abstract A third of Hispanic youth live below the poverty line, making them vulnerable for exposure to gangs, substances, and violence, all of which have been associated with substance use. The aim of the present study was to test the link between these variables, using a multiple mediation model. Results suggest that the relationship between gang exposure and adolescent substance use was mediated by both access to substances and exposure to violence. Findings provide insight into how gang exposure impacts outcomes for low-income youth. Implications for prevention and policy are discussed.


Journal of Community Psychology | 2018

Community coalitions as spaces for collective voice, action, and the sharing of resources

David T. Lardier; Carrie Bergeson; Autumn M. Bermea; Kathryn Herr; Brad Forenza; Pauline Garcia-Reid; Robert J. Reid

This study examined how a community coalition, focused on prevention efforts, can aid in bridging resources between community organizations in a resource-deprived area. We also explored how it may serve as a venue to support significant changes to the community, adults, and youth who live there. Drawing on 18 individual interviews with adult coalition members from various community organizations, in a large, underserved city in the northeastern United States, we examined these data for narrations of the coalitions place within the broader prevention community and how the coalition may be an organizational venue for collective voice. We were specifically interested in hearing if these adult community members saw the coalition as filling a gap within their community. Our data revealed that while organizations within the community have been decimated due to reduced funding, the present coalition aided in meeting a variety of needs. These needs included the facilitation of community voice while helping to bridge resources between organizations, which would otherwise work alone.


Journal of Community Psychology | 2018

Validation of the Brief Sense of Community Scale among youth of color from an underserved urban community

David T. Lardier; Robert J. Reid; Pauline Garcia-Reid

Neighborhood sense of community (SOC) is a key construct in the community psychology literature. While the research on neighborhood SOC has progressed significantly, there is a need to further validate the Brief Sense of Community Scale (BSCS) among youth. A critical area of scholarship, therefore, is to examine the factor structure of the BSCS among a cohort of adolescents, particularly from the United States. This study tested the factor structure of the BSCS among a sample of urban youth of color (Nxa0=xa0383) using SPSS AMOS, a structural equation modeling software. After testing the factor structure, we examined the relationships between each of the BSCS subscales and conceptually related variables (e.g., psychological empowerment, relational power, and school importance). Results from this study confirm the first- and second-order factor structure of the BSCS among youth. BSCS and its underlying subscales were both correlated with one another and correlated with the intrapersonal component of psychological empowerment, relational power, and school importance. Our findings have critical implications for the field of community psychology and the development and use of the BSCS among adolescents.


Journal of Community Psychology | 2018

Communitarianism and youth empowerment: Motivation for participation in a community-based substance abuse prevention coalition

Autumn M. Bermea; David T. Lardier; Brad Forenza; Pauline Garcia-Reid; Robert J. Reid

In recent years, collaborative efforts between universities and community-based coalitions have helped develop prevention-intervention efforts to decrease the prevalence of drug and alcohol use among youth in low-income, majority-minority urban areas. xa0One theory often employed to understand the efficacy of community member involvement is McMillian and Chaviss (1986) sense of community (SOC) model. This model posits how 4 main tenants (i.e., sense of belonging, emotional connection, needs fulfillment, and influence) lead to increased empowerment. The present study examines how individual SOC affected substance abuse coalition members (Nxa0=xa017) motivations for serving on a coalition. Findings explore how all four tenants of McMillian and Chaviss (1986) model influenced community members involvement in the coalition, which have implications for prevention, policy, and further research.


Journal of Community Psychology | 2018

Validation of an abbreviated Sociopolitical Control Scale for Youth among a sample of underresourced urban youth of color

David T. Lardier; Robert J. Reid; Pauline Garcia-Reid

Empowerment is a higher order multilevel framework that is used to understand and evaluate individuals, groups, organizations, and communities as they engage in the practice and execution of the participatory process. The intrapersonal component of psychological empowerment has been examined through sociopolitical control and occupies two dimensions: leadership competence and policy control. Though the Sociopolitical Control Scale for Youth (SPCS-Y) has been examined using a 17-item scale, Christens, Krauss, and Zeldin (2016) recently assessed the factorial validity of an abbreviated SPCS-Y among a sample of Malaysian adolescents. Yet, there is a need to further examine this abbreviated SPCS-Y among a sample of U.S adolescents. This study tested the factor structure of the abbreviated SPCS-Y among a sample of urban youth of color (N = 383). Using multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) we examined the relationship leadership competence and policy control had with conceptually related variables. Analyses supported the bidimensional factor structure and the factorial validity of the abbreviated SPCS-Y. MANOVA results also indicate that participants with both higher leadership competence and policy control also had higher composite scores among conceptually related variables.


Education and Urban Society | 2018

Understanding the Influence of Sexual Risk Taking, Ethnic Identity, and Family and Peer Support on School Importance Among Hispanic Adolescents

Pauline Garcia-Reid; David T. Lardier; Robert J. Reid; Ijeoma Opara

Despite the broader academic gains experienced by Hispanic students, who represent the largest minority group in the United States, they remain the least educated of all major ethnic groups, and our understanding of their academic needs and strengths remains woefully inadequate. Therefore, this study examined the risk (e.g., sexual risk taking) and protective factors (e.g., family support, supportive peer networks, and ethnic identity) associated with school importance among Hispanic teens (N = 587) residing in a high-risk, resource poor urban community and the ways in which these relationships vary between adolescent males (46.5%) and adolescent females (53.5%). Schools that are able to harness the numerous assets embedded within the Hispanic community are well positioned to create learning environments that are encouraging, are culturally responsive, and can potentially reduce risk involvement that may interfere with valuing the role of school importance. Implications for school-based personnel are discussed.


Journal of Lgbt Issues in Counseling | 2017

The Relationship between Sexual Minority Status and Suicidal Ideations among Urban Hispanic Adolescents

David T. Lardier; Autumn M. Bermea; Stacy Anne Pinto; Pauline Garcia-Reid; Robert J. Reid

ABSTRACT Youth identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ), and more specifically Hispanic youth identifying as LGBTQ, experience suicidal ideation (SI) at disproportionate rates. Furthermore, adolescents identifying as LGBTQ are likely to experience high rates of bullying, depression, and limited social support, increasing SI. Counselors often have difficulty working with youth at the intersection of sexual and ethnic minority statuses. Using structural equation modeling techniques, the present study examined sexual minority status as a predictor of school bullying, depression, social support, and SI, among urban Hispanic youth (N = 538). The authors also tested social support as a buffering mechanism.

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Robert J. Reid

Montclair State University

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Autumn M. Bermea

Montclair State University

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Brad Forenza

Montclair State University

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Kathryn Herr

Montclair State University

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Brian V. Carolan

Montclair State University

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Carly Nacer

Montclair State University

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Carrie Bergeson

Montclair State University

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