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Featured researches published by Lew Bank.


Aggressive Behavior | 1984

Family interaction: A process model of deviancy training

Gerald R. Patterson; Thomas J. Dishion; Lew Bank

A model was presented describing the reciprocal influence of disruptions in parent discipline practices on irritable exchanges between the target child and other family members. Disrupted parent discipline and irritable microsocial exchanges within the family were hypothesized to provide a basic training for aggression that generalizes to other settings such that the child is identified by peers, teachers, and parents as physically aggressive. Physical fighting was thought to lead to rejection by the normal peer group, which was hypothesized to feed back to further exacerbate fighting. Multilevel assessment including interview, questionnaires, laboratory studies, and home observations were carried out with the families of 91 preadolescent and adolescent boys. Nine indicators from the assessment battery were used to define the constructs Inept Parental Discipline, Negative Microsocial Exchanges, Physical Fighting, and Poor Peer Relations. Structural equations (LISREL VI) were used to describe the relations among the constructs. The t values for the path coefficients were significant. A chi-square analysis showed an acceptable fit between the model and the empirical findings. The findings were interpreted as being consistent with the hypothesis that under certain circumstances, family interaction may serve as basic training for aggression. In the present study, interactions with siblings in the home seemed to serve a pivotal role.


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 1991

A comparative evaluation of parent-training interventions for families of chronic delinquents

Lew Bank; J. Hicks Marlowe; John B. Reid; Gerald R. Patterson; Mark R. Weinrott

Fifty-five families of chronically offending delinquents were randomly assigned to parent-training treatment or to service traditionally provided by the juvenile court and community. The families in the parent-training group received an average of 44.8 hours of professional contact (23.3 hours of which were phone contacts), and each control group family received treatment estimated at more than 50 hours on the average. Comparisons of police contact data at baseline and subsequent years for the two groups showed that subjects in both groups demonstrated reduced rates of offending during the followup years. The finding most relevant was significant treatment-by-time effect for offense rates, with most of this effect accounted for by a greater reduction in serious crimes for the experimental group during the treatment year, and a similar reduction of the community control group occurring in the first of three followup years. These early decrements in offense rates persisted during followup for both groups. Throughout the study, boys in the experimental group spent significantly less time in institutional settings than did boys in the control group. Parent training had a significant impact, but the reduction in offending was produced at very high emotional cost to staff. Although it is clear that this population requires substantial treatment resources, this study underscores the need for more work on prevention.


Child Abuse & Neglect | 2000

The veridicality of punitive childhood experiences reported by adolescents and young adults

A. Prescott; Lew Bank; John B. Reid; John F. Knutson; Bert Burraston; J. M. Eddy

OBJECTIVE The primary goal of the present research was to determine whether retrospective reports of childhood disciplinary experiences and perceptions of that discipline correspond to actual childhood events and whether the accuracy of that report was influenced by the affective state of the respondent. METHOD Eighty-three adolescent and young adult males completed a retrospective measure of physical child maltreatment, Assessing Environments (AEIII), and the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI). As children the participants had been observed naturalistically in their homes interacting with their parents an average of 10 years earlier. RESULTS Analyses were consistent with the hypothesis that both current mood and actual observations of parent-child interactions during childhood predict self-reported recollections of childhood maltreatment by ones parents. Further the veridicality of such recollections appears to depend upon the objective specificity versus the perceptive nature of the questions used to elicit the recollections. CONCLUSIONS The findings suggest that assessment instruments suitable for obtaining information regarding earlier childhood victimization must utilize behaviorally specific items. Thus, items that are either global or intimate a normative comparison should be avoided.


Behavior Analyst | 1987

Delinquency Prevention Through Training Parents in Family Management

Lew Bank; Gerald R. Patterson; John B. Reid

Nearly two decades of clinical research at the Oregon Social Learning Center (OSLC) have helped to shape a theory of antisocial behavior in boys. Models depicting the theory are presented and discussed. In addition, family management variables such as “discipline,” “monitoring,” “positive parenting,” and “problem solving” are described as used in clinical applications. Total aversive behavior (TAB), based on home observations, and parent daily report (PDR), based on telephone interviews, are examined as outcome indicators for a variety of studies investigating the efficacy of the OSLC social interactional therapy. Several recent reports of treatment for adjudicated adolescents and their families are included; law violations are the dependent measures in those studies. Examples of the interface between clinical work and theory at OSLC are presented. Questions of generalization of the clinical methodology to large urban populations, and access to parents who most need to learn the parenting techniques are noted.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2005

Sibling relationship contributions to individual and family well-being: introduction to the special issue.

Laurie Kramer; Lew Bank

This special issue presents new findings that illustrate the ways in which sibling relationships serve as important contexts for individual development and family functioning. This collection of articles, which emphasizes effects on both normative and at-risk development, is intended to stimulate further research on the multifaceted and often contradictory contributions siblings extend to one another across the life course.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2005

Older siblings benefit from a family-based preventive intervention for preschoolers at risk for conduct problems

Laurie Miller Brotman; Spring Dawson-McClure; Kathleen Kiely Gouley; Kristina Mcguire; Bert Burraston; Lew Bank

This study evaluated sibling effects of a family-based intervention aimed at preventing conduct problems in preschool-age siblings of adjudicated youths. Ninety-two families of preschoolers who had older siblings adjudicated for delinquent acts were randomly assigned to intervention and control conditions. Of these, 47 families had nontargeted school-age (5-11 years) or adolescent siblings (12-17 years) living at home. These families were considered in this report. The authors hypothesized group differences on antisocial behavior and positive peer relations for older siblings of targeted preschoolers. The authors examined outcomes of parent- and teacher-reported behavior immediately postintervention and 8 months postintervention. Findings revealed significant intervention effects 8 months following intervention for adolescent siblings on parent-reported antisocial behavior and positive peer relations. Teacher reports confirmed group differences for antisocial behavior immediately postintervention. Findings document benefits for adolescent siblings.


Archive | 1992

The Use of Structural Equation Modeling in Combining Data from Different Types of Assessment

Lew Bank; Gerald R. Patterson

Some years ago, the authors of this chapter sat in a Chicago-bound jetliner watching squall lines and immense thunderheads across a dark sky and bantering about the use of multiple versus single assessment devices. We were already committed—through a major NIMH grant for an ongoing longitudinal study—to the time-consuming and expensive Campbell and Fiske (1959) strategy of collecting data from a variety of agents using a diversity of methods. Our colleague, Tina Pastorelli, had just completed a series of analyses in Rome that clearly demonstrated the direct impact of parenting practices on children’s antisocial behavior (Pastorelli & Dishion, 1991). These results pleased us because they were consistent with our theoretical framework and prior investigations. The problem was that only data taken from the mothers of subjects had been collected for the Rome study. And since that study had yielded results in accord with our position, why were we spending our time and grant money collecting tremendously more complex data sets than Pastorelli’s when the same results apparently could be obtained simply by asking mothers for their perspectives? Were we likely to gain anything for all our effort?


Journal of Family Psychology | 2013

Internalizing and externalizing symptoms in young children exposed to intimate partner violence: examining intervening processes.

Amie Zarling; Sarah Taber-Thomas; Amanda Murray; John F. Knuston; Erika Lawrence; Nizete-Ly Valles; David S. DeGarmo; Lew Bank

Childrens emotion dysregulation, childrens appraisals, maternal psychological functioning, and harsh discipline were investigated as potential mediators in the putative link between exposure to intimate partner violence and poor child outcomes. Participants included 132 children ages 6-8 and their mothers who had been enrolled in a longitudinal study of parenting and childrens social development. The mothers were receiving some form of government-based economic assistance or other social services, and were currently involved in a romantic relationship. Results of structural equation modeling indicated childrens emotion dysregulation mediated the links between exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV) and both internalizing and externalizing problems. Harsh discipline mediated the link between exposure to IPV and externalizing, but not internalizing, symptoms. Child appraisals and maternal psychological functioning mediated the link between exposure to IPV and internalizing, but not externalizing, symptoms.


Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review | 2009

Assessing Children’s Exposure to Intimate Partner Violence

John F. Knutson; Erika Lawrence; Sarah M. Taber; Lew Bank; David S. DeGarmo

Child exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV) is widely acknowledged as a threat to the psycho-social and academic well-being of children. Unfortunately, as reflected in the literature, the specific link between such exposure and childhood outcomes is ambiguous. Based on a review of the literature, this article suggests that this state of affairs is due, in part, to the manner with which exposure to IPV is operationally defined. After reviewing the dominant strategies for operationally defining exposure to IPV and the problems associated with those strategies, this article reports original data contrasting three measures derived from maternal reports, three measures derived from child reports, and the limited concordance among those different indices of exposure to IPV. The implications of these findings for research on child outcomes and the clinical assessment of children who might have been exposed to IPV are discussed.


Evaluation and Program Planning | 2014

Development and feasibility of a sibling intervention for youth in foster care

Brianne H. Kothari; Bowen McBeath; Emilie Lamson-Siu; Sara Jade Webb; Paul Sorenson; Hannah Bowen; Jeffrey Waid; Lew Bank

Due to their ubiquity and possible influence on youth mental health, academic, and other outcomes, sibling-focused intervention strategies may be important for the development and implementation of evidence-based practices (EBPs) in child welfare. However, there is no rigorous evidence as to either the best methods for, or feasibility of, incorporating the sibling link within existing clinical treatments for foster youth. This paper applies the literature on evidence-based practices (EBP) and implementation research in child welfare to sibling-focused intervention; and presents data concerning the development, delivery, cost, and feasibility of a novel sibling-focused intervention program, Supporting Siblings in Foster Care (SIBS-FC). Results suggest that despite the challenges and costs involved with delivering SIBS-FC, the program catered to the diverse needs of pre-adolescent and adolescent siblings living together and apart, was viewed positively by youth, and was implemented with a high degree of fidelity. These findings underscore the importance of attending to the early-stage development of psychosocial interventions in child welfare and highlight the role of interagency collaboration, program planning, staff training and supervision, and fidelity tracking for EBP development in child welfare. Implications for prevention research and sibling-focused intervention programming in child welfare are discussed.

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Bowen McBeath

Portland State University

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Jeffrey Waid

University of Minnesota

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Paul Sorenson

Portland State University

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John B. Reid

Oregon Research Institute

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Summer Newell

Portland State University

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