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Dive into the research topics where Ellen E. Pinderhughes is active.

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Featured researches published by Ellen E. Pinderhughes.


Developmental Psychology | 1999

Predicting Developmental Outcomes at School Entry Using a Multiple-Risk Model: Four American Communities

Mark T. Greenberg; Liliana J. Lengua; John D. Coie; Ellen E. Pinderhughes

The contributions of different risk factors in predicting childrens psychological and academic outcomes at the end of 1st grade were examined. Using a regression model, levels of ecobehavioral risk were assessed in the following order: specific demographics, broad demographics, family psychosocial status, mothers depressive symptoms, and neighborhood quality. Participants were 337 families from 4 American communities. Predictor variables were assessed in kindergarten, and teacher, parent, and child outcomes (behavioral and academic) were assessed at the end of 1st grade. Results indicated that (a) each level of analysis contributed to prediction of most outcomes, (b) 18%-29% of the variance was predicted in outcomes, (c) a common set of predictors predicted numerous outcomes, (d) ethnicity showed little unique prediction, and (e) the quality of the neighborhood showed small but unique prediction to externalizing problems.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2010

The Effects of a Multiyear Universal Social-Emotional Learning Program: The Role of Student and School Characteristics.

Karen L. Bierman; John D. Coie; Kenneth A. Dodge; Mark T. Greenberg; John E. Lochman; Robert J. McMahon; Ellen E. Pinderhughes

OBJECTIVE This article examines the impact of a universal social-emotional learning program, the Fast Track PATHS (Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies) curriculum and teacher consultation, embedded within the Fast Track selective prevention model. METHOD The longitudinal analysis involved 2,937 children of multiple ethnicities who remained in the same intervention or control schools for Grades 1, 2, and 3. The study involved a clustered randomized controlled trial involving sets of schools randomized within 3 U.S. locations. Measures assessed teacher and peer reports of aggression, hyperactive-disruptive behaviors, and social competence. Beginning in first grade and through 3 successive years, teachers received training and support and implemented the PATHS curriculum in their classrooms. RESULTS The study examined the main effects of intervention as well as how outcomes were affected by characteristics of the child (baseline level of problem behavior, gender) and by the school environment (student poverty). Modest positive effects of sustained program exposure included reduced aggression and increased prosocial behavior (according to both teacher and peer report) and improved academic engagement (according to teacher report). Peer report effects were moderated by gender, with significant effects only for boys. Most intervention effects were moderated by school environment, with effects stronger in less disadvantaged schools, and effects on aggression were larger in students who showed higher baseline levels of aggression. CONCLUSIONS A major implication of the findings is that well-implemented multiyear social-emotional learning programs can have significant and meaningful preventive effects on the population-level rates of aggression, social competence, and academic engagement in the elementary school years.


American Journal of Community Psychology | 1999

If it's offered, will they come? Influences on parents' participation in a community-based conduct problems prevention program.

Joan K. Orrell-Valente; Ellen E. Pinderhughes; Ernest Valente Jr.; Robert D. Laird

This study examined influences on the rate and quality of parent participation in the Fast Track Program, a multi-system, longitudinal preventive intervention for children who are at risk for conduct problems. A theoretical model of the relations among family coordinator characteristics, parent characteristics, the therapeutic engagement between family coordinator and parent, and rate and quality of parent participation was the basis for this study. “Family coordinators” are the Fast Track program personnel who conduct group-based parent-training sessions and home visits. Participants in this study included 12 family coordinators (42% were African American, 58% European American) and 87parents (55% were African American, 45% European American). The level of therapeutic engagement between the parent and the family coordinator was positively associated with the rate of parent attendance at group training sessions. The extent of family coordinator-parent racial and socioeconomic similarity and the extent of the family coordinators relevant life experiences were highly associated with the level of therapeutic engagement. The quality, but not the rate, of participation was lower for African American parents. Implications of these findings for preventive intervention with this population are discussed.


Development and Psychopathology | 2002

Using the Fast Track randomized prevention trial to test the early-starter model of the development of serious conduct problems.

Kl Bierman; John D. Coie; Kenneth A. Dodge; Mark T. Greenberg; John E. Lochman; Robert J. McMahon; Ellen E. Pinderhughes

The Fast Track prevention trial was used to test hypotheses from the Early-Starter Model of the development of chronic conduct problems. We randomly assigned 891 high-risk first-grade boys and girls (51% African American) to receive the long-term Fast Track prevention or not. After 4 years, outcomes were assessed through teacher ratings, parent ratings, peer nominations, and child self-report. Positive effects of assignment to intervention were evident in teacher and parent ratings of conduct problems, peer social preference scores, and association with deviant peers. Assessments of proximal goals of intervention (e.g., hostile attributional bias, problem-solving skill, harsh parental discipline, aggressive and prosocial behavior at home and school) collected after grade 3 were found to partially mediate these effects. The findings are interpreted as consistent with developmental theory.


Development and Psychopathology | 2000

Factors influencing maltreated children's early adjustment in foster care

Stephanie Milan; Ellen E. Pinderhughes

Internal representations of self and primary attachment figures may be one mechanism by which maltreatment affects childrens interpersonal behavior and relationships with others. Research on the continuity and influence of maltreated childrens attachment representations, however, has not included youngsters removed from abusive or neglectful home environments. This paper examines the influence of maltreated childrens maternal and self-representations on subsequent relationships with foster mothers and behavioral adjustment in foster care. Participants included 32 children, ages 9-13 years, who entered foster placement for the first time after a sustained relationship with a maltreating biological mother. Upon initially entering foster care, childrens maternal and self-representations were significantly related to each other and to severity of maltreatment history but not to other factors believed to influence the quality of parent-child relationship (e.g., maternal mental health, partner stability). In addition, these representations significantly predicted childrens subsequent views of their relationships with foster mothers. Finally, childrens behavior in their foster homes was associated with maltreatment severity, internal representations assessed at entry into foster care, and to concurrent perceptions of their new foster mothers. These findings advance our understanding of foster placements role in maltreated childrens development and provide preliminary insight into the processes associated with the formation of potentially compensatory relationships.


Children and Youth Services Review | 1996

Toward understanding family readjustment following older child adoptions: The interplay between theory generation and empirical research☆

Ellen E. Pinderhughes

Abstract Despite developments in research on older child adoptions during the last fifteen years, many gaps still remain. Among these gaps is a focus on understanding the process of readjustment following older child adoptions. Understanding this process is best facilitated by theory generation as well as empirical inquiry. This paper describes the developmental process of a research program that integrates theory generation and empirical inquiry in an attempt to generate an understanding of the process of postplacement readjustment. The formulation of a theoretical model that posits four developmental and normative phases that evolve across the individual, dyadic, and family levels and that features five domains of functioning (cognitions, resources, stressors, coping, relationship formation) serves as the foundation for a short term longitudinal study currently underway. Preliminary findings from the longitudinal research are presented in the form of a case study. Issues and implications for future theorizing and research also are discussed.


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2013

Evidence for a multi-dimensional latent structural model of externalizing disorders

Katie Witkiewitz; Kevin M. King; Robert J. McMahon; Johnny Wu; Jeremy W. Luk; Karen L. Bierman; John D. Coie; Kenneth A. Dodge; Mark T. Greenberg; John E. Lochman; Ellen E. Pinderhughes

Strong associations between conduct disorder (CD), antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) and substance use disorders (SUD) seem to reflect a general vulnerability to externalizing behaviors. Recent studies have characterized this vulnerability on a continuous scale, rather than as distinct categories, suggesting that the revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) take into account the underlying continuum of externalizing behaviors. However, most of this research has not included measures of disorders that appear in childhood [e.g., attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) or oppositional defiant disorder (ODD)], nor has it considered the full range of possibilities for the latent structure of externalizing behaviors, particularly factor mixture models, which allow for a latent factor to have both continuous and categorical dimensions. Finally, the majority of prior studies have not tested multidimensional models. Using lifetime diagnoses of externalizing disorders from participants in the Fast Track Project (n = 715), we analyzed a series of latent variable models ranging from fully continuous factor models to fully categorical mixture models. Continuous models provided the best fit to the observed data and also suggested that a two-factor model of externalizing behavior, defined as (1) ODD+ADHD+CD and (2) SUD with adult antisocial behavior sharing common variance with both factors, was necessary to explain the covariation in externalizing disorders. The two-factor model of externalizing behavior was then replicated using a nationally representative sample drawn from the National Comorbidity Survey-Replication data (n = 5,692). These results have important implications for the conceptualization of externalizing disorders in DSM-5.


Developmental Psychology | 1999

Predicting developmental outcomes at school entry using a multiple-risk model: four American communities. The Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group.

Mark T. Greenberg; Liliana J. Lengua; John D. Coie; Ellen E. Pinderhughes

The contributions of different risk factors in predicting childrens psychological and academic outcomes at the end of 1st grade were examined. Using a regression model, levels of ecobehavioral risk were assessed in the following order: specific demographics, broad demographics, family psychosocial status, mothers depressive symptoms, and neighborhood quality. Participants were 337 families from 4 American communities. Predictor variables were assessed in kindergarten, and teacher, parent, and child outcomes (behavioral and academic) were assessed at the end of 1st grade. Results indicated that (a) each level of analysis contributed to prediction of most outcomes, (b) 18%-29% of the variance was predicted in outcomes, (c) a common set of predictors predicted numerous outcomes, (d) ethnicity showed little unique prediction, and (e) the quality of the neighborhood showed small but unique prediction to externalizing problems.


Aggressive Behavior | 2013

School Outcomes of Aggressive-Disruptive Children: Prediction From Kindergarten Risk Factors and Impact of the Fast Track Prevention Program

Karen L. Bierman; John D. Coie; Kenneth A. Dodge; Mark T. Greenberg; John E. Lochman; Robert McMohan; Ellen E. Pinderhughes

A multi-gate screening process identified 891 children with aggressive-disruptive behavior problems at school entry. Fast Track provided a multi-component preventive intervention in the context of a randomized-controlled design. In addition to psychosocial support and skill training for parents and children, the intervention included intensive reading tutoring in first grade, behavioral management consultation with teachers, and the provision of homework support (as needed) through tenth grade. This study examined the impact of the intervention, as well as the impact of the childs initial aggressive-disruptive behaviors and associated school readiness skills (cognitive ability, reading readiness, attention problems) on academic progress and educational placements during elementary school (Grades 1-4) and during the secondary school years (Grades 7-10), as well as high school graduation. Child behavior problems and skills at school entry predicted school difficulties (low grades, grade retention, placement in a self-contained classroom, behavior disorder classification, and failure to graduate). Disappointingly, intervention did not significantly improve these long-term school outcomes.


Applied Developmental Science | 2008

Excavating Culture: Disentangling Ethnic Differences From Contextual Influences in Parenting

Huynh-Nhu Le; Rosario Ceballo; Ruth K. Chao; Nancy E. Hill; Velma McBride Murry; Ellen E. Pinderhughes

Historically, much of the research on parenting has not disentangled the influences of race/ethnicity, SES, and culture on family functioning and the development of children and adolescents. This special issue addresses this gap by disentangling ethnic differences in parenting behaviors from their contextual influences, thereby deepening our understanding of parenting processes in diverse families. Six members of the Parenting Section of the Study Group on Race, Culture, and Ethnicity (SGRCE) introduce and implement a novel approach toward understanding this question. The goal of this project is to study culturally related processes and the degree to which they predict parenting. An iterative process was employed to delineate the main parenting constructs (warmth, psychological and behavioral control, monitoring, communication, and self-efficacy), cultural processes, and contextual influences, and to coordinate a data analytic plan utilizing individual datasets with diverse samples to answer the research questions.

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Mark T. Greenberg

Pennsylvania State University

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Robert J. McMahon

University of British Columbia

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Karen L. Bierman

Pennsylvania State University

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Robert L. Nix

Pennsylvania State University

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Damon E. Jones

Pennsylvania State University

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E. Michael Foster

Pennsylvania State University

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