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Dive into the research topics where Kyle Eichas is active.

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Featured researches published by Kyle Eichas.


Identity | 2008

Promoting Positive Identity Development in Troubled Youth: A Developmental Intervention Science Outreach Research Approach

William M. Kurtines; Marilyn J. Montgomery; Kyle Eichas; Rachel A. Ritchie; Arlen J. Garcia; Richard E. Albrecht; Steven L. Berman; Laura Ferrer-Wreder; Carolyn Cass Lorente

This article illustrates how developmental intervention science outreach research contributes to knowledge development on the promotion of positive identity development by describing results from the Miami Youth Development Project. The project is committed to the use of descriptive and explanatory knowledge about evidence-based individual and institutional intervention strategies for promoting developmental change in self and identity. Our efforts, described here, include a method for measuring theoretically and personally meaningful identity change, a procedure for integrating key aspects of qualitative and quantitative data through relational data analysis, and an evidence-based positive youth development intervention that fosters measurable and meaningful identity change.


Journal of Adolescent Research | 2008

A Developmental Intervention Science (DIS) Outreach Research Approach to Promoting Youth Development Theoretical, Methodological, and Meta-Theoretical Challenges

Marilyn J. Montgomery; William M. Kurtines; Laura Ferrer-Wreder; Steven L. Berman; Carolyn Cass Lorente; Ervin Briones; Wendy K. Silverman; Rachel A. Ritchie; Kyle Eichas

This paper describes work directed toward creating community-supported positive youth development interventions that draw on a developmental intervention science outreach research approach. With respect to developmental interventions, this approach focuses on creating evidence-based longitudinal change intervention strategies for promoting long-term developmental change. The paper describes three broad challenges (theoretical, methodological, and meta-theoretical) that the authors faced in their efforts to develop and implement community-supported intervention programs built on this approach. The authors describe first the theoretical challenges they addressed in developing the conceptual framework for their community-supported intervention; second, the challenge of developing and refining a methodological framework for evaluating positive youth development interventions in “real-world” settings; and third, the meta-theoretical challenges that arose in the context of implementing community-supported positive development programs.


Identity | 2014

Reducing Identity Distress: Results of an Identity Intervention for Emerging Adults

Alan Meca; Kyle Eichas; Shannon Quintana; Brent M. Maximin; Rachel A. Ritchie; Vanessa L. Madrazo; Gabriella M. Harari; William M. Kurtines

Emerging adulthood is a transitional period between adolescence and adulthood where positive and negative life trajectories tend to diverge, with issues surrounding identity formation playing a key role. The present study evaluated the Miami Adult Development Project, a self-facilitated identity-focused intervention. The sample consisted of 141 emerging adults (19−29 years old; M = 23.08) who completed pretest and posttest assessments. Results indicated participation in the intervention relative to the comparison group was associated with lower levels of identity distress and higher levels of well-being via the reduction of identity distress and the development of a consolidated identity (commitment and synthesis). The present study provides evidence for the effectiveness of positive identity interventions during emerging adulthood.


Journal of Adolescent Research | 2008

Promoting Positive Youth Development: Relational Data Analysis (RDA).

William M. Kurtines; Marilyn J. Montgomery; Lisa Lewis Arango; Gabrielle Kortsch; Richard E. Albrecht; A. García; Rachel A. Ritchie; Kyle Eichas

This article provides an overview of the origins and use of relational data analysis (RDA). RDA is a multidimensional, multiphasic framework for unifying data analytic strategies across dimensions (quantitative/qualitative, causal/structural, observation/interpretation, etc.) and phases of analyses (conceptual, theoretical, and research analyses). RDA was developed within a relational metatheoretical methodological framework for overcoming the splits that have historically characterized methodological metatheory. The aim was to formulate a practical, ready-at-hand framework that the developmental scientist could use to unify the analysis of developmental change in real life “applied” settings as well as clinic and laboratory settings.


Child Development | 2017

Empowering Marginalized Youth: A Self-Transformative Intervention for Promoting Positive Youth Development

Kyle Eichas; Marilyn J. Montgomery; Alan Meca; William M. Kurtines

This article reports the results of a positive youth development (PYD) intervention for adolescents in alternative high schools (209 African American and Hispanic American adolescents, aged 14-18; 118 females and 91 males). The intervention was guided by a self-transformative model of PYD (Eichas, Meca, Montgomery, & Kurtines, 2014). This model proposes that the actions youth take to define themselves function as active ingredients in positive development over the life course. Consistent with the self-transformative model, results provided support for direct or mediated intervention effects on the self-transformative processes of self-construction and self-discovery, life goal development, identity synthesis, and internalizing problems. The findings illustrate the utility of using a self-transformative approach to PYD in work with marginalized youth populations.


Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research | 2018

Psychometric Properties of an Instrument to Measure Social and Pedagogical School Climate among Teachers (PESOC).

Hanna Hultin; Laura Ferrer-Wreder; Kyle Eichas; Martin Karlberg; L. Grosin; Maria Rosaria Galanti

ABSTRACT This study investigated the psychometric properties of a teacher-reported version of a Swedish school climate instrument called the Pedagogical and Social Climate (PESOC), which consists of 95 items covering cultural, structural and social factors. A sample of 348 teachers from 19 Swedish secondary schools was used. Multilevel confirmatory factor analysis conducted within a structural equation modelling framework indicated that the PESOC had a two-factor structure at the teacher level and a one-factor at the school level. The PESOC’s convergent validity was supported by the school-level correlations between PESOC and another established instrument (i.e., the Team Climate Inventory). Further validation studies of PESOC are needed with larger, more representative samples, and with information on important outcomes such as student achievement and wellbeing.


Identity | 2012

The Development of a Qualitative Extension for the Personally Expressive Activities Questionnaire (PEAQ-QE): A Construct Validation Study

Roberto Rinaldi; Alan Meca; Kyle Eichas; William M. Kurtines; Richard E. Albrecht; Sashay Goodletty

This study describes the development of a qualitative extension for the Personally Expressive Activities Questionnaire (PEAQ), a widely used quantitative questionnaire assessing feeling of personal expressiveness, a core positive identity construct. The PEAQ qualitative extension was developed as part of an ongoing effort to develop and refine an easy-to-use, standardized, reliable method designed for use in adding a free response qualitative component to a full range of fixed response quantitative measures. This article reports basic psychometric properties for the qualitative extension and preliminary evidence of construct validity. The availability of a ready-at-hand standardized method for including free response qualitative extensions of widely used measures with known reliability and validity in developmental research provides a means for detecting and rendering theoretically meaningful: (a) unique sample-specific free response linguistic content properties, (b) linguistic content properties undetected by fixed response measures, and (c) newly emergent linguistic content properties of core developmental research concepts and constructs in ways not possible using fixed response methods alone.


Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research | 2018

Pedagogical and Social School Climate: Psychometric Evaluation and Validation of the Student Edition of PESOC

Hanna Hultin; Kyle Eichas; Laura Ferrer-Wreder; R. Dimitrova; Martin Karlberg; Maria Rosaria Galanti

ABSTRACT Previous studies indicate that school climate is important for student health and academic achievement. This study concerns the validity and reliability of the student edition a Swedish instrument for measuring pedagogical and social school climate (PESOC). Data were collected from 5,745 students at 97 Swedish secondary schools. Multilevel confirmatory factor analyses were conducted, and multilevel composite reliability estimates, as well as correlations with school-level achievement indicators, were calculated. The results supported an 8-factor structure at the student level and 1 general factor at the school level. Factor loadings and composite reliability estimates were acceptable at both levels. The school-level factor was moderately and positively correlated with school-level academic achievement. The student PESOC is a promising instrument for studying school climate.


Identity | 2018

Do Japanese Youth Proactively Form Identities? An Investigation of Independent Self Formation

Shinichi Mizokami; James E. Côté; Kyle Eichas; Teru Toyokawa

ABSTRACT This article addresses the debate concerning cultural differences in independent and interdependent self formation among Japanese youth. Independent self formation is defined as any purposive action to form a self actively through individual efforts. This study provides evidence that the majority of Japanese youth, despite their culturally collectivist backgrounds, form selves individually at the level of specific activities. High levels of active self formation were found among 41% of the sample. These findings contribute to the literature on both self development and identity formation, with the finding that both independent self formation and proactive identity formation occur among a significant proportion of Japanese students.


Child Care Quarterly | 2010

Mediators of Positive Youth Development Intervention Change: Promoting Change in Positive and Problem Outcomes?

Kyle Eichas; Richard E. Albrecht; Arlen J. Garcia; Rachel A. Ritchie; Aida Varela; A. García; Roberto Rinaldi; Rebecca Wang; Marilyn J. Montgomery; Wendy K. Silverman; James Jaccard; William M. Kurtines

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William M. Kurtines

Florida International University

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Marilyn J. Montgomery

Florida International University

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Rachel A. Ritchie

Florida International University

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Alan Meca

Old Dominion University

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Richard E. Albrecht

Florida International University

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A. García

Florida International University

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Knut Sundell

National Board of Health and Welfare

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