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Dive into the research topics where Mason G. Haber is active.

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Featured researches published by Mason G. Haber.


Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research | 2008

Predicting Improvement of Transitioning Young People in the Partnerships for Youth Transition Initiative: Findings from a Multisite Demonstration

Mason G. Haber; Nicole Deschênes; Hewitt B. Clark

Prior research has indicated that young people with serious mental health conditions show poorer progress and greater challenges in the transition to adulthood, as reflected by lower rates of employment and postsecondary education, higher rates of criminal justice involvement, and greater interference in daily activities from mental health and substance use disorders. Little knowledge exists, however, regarding improvement on these indicators among young people enrolled in community-based transition support programs and individual characteristics that might moderate this improvement. This study describes rates of improvement on indicators of transition progress and challenges among young people enrolled in a multisite demonstration of transition support programs. Young people in the study showed increased rates of progress and decreased rates of challenges over four quarters of enrollment. Moderation of these changes by individual characteristics including demographic, historical, and diagnostic variables suggested ways of improving transition support programs and avenues for future research.


American Journal of Orthopsychiatry | 2012

Understanding the Ecology and Development of Children and Families Experiencing Homelessness: Implications for Practice, Supportive Services, and Policy

Ryan P. Kilmer; James R. Cook; Cindy A. Crusto; Katherine Strater; Mason G. Haber

The experience of homelessness can pervade multiple levels and facets of a child and familys world. In view of the historical risks in the lives of children who are experiencing homelessness (e.g., growing up under conditions of poverty, exposure to family violence), it is clear that interventions, services, and supports need to be equally comprehensive to have a positive influence on child functioning and development. Consequently, service systems, providers, and community supports need to address the circumstances of children and families experiencing homelessness and, more specifically, better attend to their ecologies and the diverse factors that can affect their well-being and adjustment trajectories. Such an approach is needed to better understand the range of factors and influences on the development and adaptation of these youngsters at home, at school, and with their peers as well as to guide the identification and implementation of adequate family-centered services and supports.


Review of Educational Research | 2016

What Works, When, for Whom, and With Whom A Meta-Analytic Review of Predictors of Postsecondary Success for Students With Disabilities

Mason G. Haber; Valerie L. Mazzotti; April L. Mustian; Dawn A. Rowe; Audrey Bartholomew; David W. Test; Catherine H. Fowler

Students with disabilities experience poorer post-school outcomes compared with their peers without disabilities. Existing experimental literature on “what works” for improving these outcomes is rare; however, a rapidly growing body of research investigates correlational relationships between experiences in school and post-school outcomes. A meta-analytic review provides means for assessing which experiences show the strongest relationships with long-term outcomes and variability in these relationships by outcome, research design, and population. This article presents a meta-analysis of in-school predictors of postsecondary employment, education, and independent living of youth with disabilities, examining 35 sources and 27 samples (N = 16,957) published from January of 1984 through May of 2010. Predictors showed differing relationships with education versus employment. Some of the least studied predictors, especially those involving multistakeholder collaboration, had larger effects than predictors more typically the focus of correlational research. Implications for future research and practice are considered.


American Journal of Orthopsychiatry | 2009

Parent-adolescent violence and later behavioral health problems among homeless and housed youth

Mason G. Haber; Paul A. Toro

Parent-adolescent violence (i.e., violence between parents and adolescents) is an important pathway to homelessness and predicts poor behavioral health outcomes among youth. However, few studies have examined links between parent violence and outcomes among youth who are homeless. Existing research has also tended to ignore adolescent violence toward parents, despite evidence that mutual violence is common. The current study examines prospective links of parent-adolescent violence to outcomes among youth who were homeless and demographically matched youth, through two complementary substudies: (a) an exploratory factor analysis (EFA) of items measuring parent and adolescent violence combined in the same analysis; and (b) an examination of predictive relationships between the factors identified in the EFA and behavioral health problems, including mental health and alcohol abuse problems. Predictive relationships were examined in the overall sample and by gender, ethnic, and housing status subgroups. Results of the EFA suggested that parent-adolescent violence includes intraindividual (i.e., separate parent and adolescent) physical components and a shared psychological component. Each of these components contributed uniquely to predicting later youth behavioral health. Implications for research and practice with youth who are homeless are discussed.


Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research | 2016

Wraparound Team Composition, Youth Self-determination, and Youth Satisfaction in Transition Services.

Thomas M. LaPorte; Mason G. Haber; JoAnne M. Malloy

Wraparound, a team-based planning process for youth and families, has been widely adopted in school-based services for older adolescents and emerging adults with serious mental health conditions transitioning to adulthood. Reservations have been voiced, however, regarding possible drawbacks of teams for these youth, including concerns about difficulties with involving supportive adults, and whether youth might perceive team-based planning as a threat to their developing autonomy. To date, however, no studies have examined the feasibility of involving supports in teams and relationships between team composition and youth’s service experiences. The present study examined the relationships between team composition and youth’s perceptions of self-determination and service satisfaction among 36 youths in seven school-based programs using a specialized form of wraparound for transition services. Findings showed that meeting participation by caregivers and professionals from both inside and outside of schools was common and that regular participation by combinations of these types of adults was related to youth self-determination and satisfaction.


American Journal of Community Psychology | 2016

Effects of Extracurricular Participation on the Internalizing Problems and Intrapersonal Strengths of Youth in a System of Care

Michelle Abraczinskas; Ryan P. Kilmer; Mason G. Haber; James R. Cook; Nicole Zarrett

Although extracurricular participation has been linked to positive youth outcomes in the general population, no research to date has examined benefits for youth diagnosed with mental health challenges. Youth in systems of care (SOCs) receive a variety of services and supports that could help them capitalize on this potential for positive development, such as access to flexible funding to support recreational interests. However, research has not examined the degree to which the increased community involvement (e.g., extracurricular participation) sought in SOCs contributes to improved outcomes. This study addresses these gaps by investigating the relationships between both average and increased extracurricular participation frequency and breadth and internalizing problems and intrapersonal strengths among SOC youth. Findings revealed that, on average, higher frequency of youth participation was associated with higher intrapersonal strengths and lower internalizing problems. Increases in participation frequency were also associated with increased strengths and decreased internalizing problems. These findings suggest that efforts to implement supports for increasing extracurricular participation of SOC youth could improve their psychosocial outcomes beyond the benefits yielded via formal services. Taken together, these results provide support for advocacy efforts to integrate youth with mental health challenges into existing extracurriculars and to create new extracurricular opportunities.


Archive | 2015

Young Adult Services

Mason G. Haber; Thomas M. LaPorte; Nelson M. Knight

The transition to legal and social adulthood involves not only newfound autonomy and opportunities, but also developmental challenges. This is especially the case for transitioning youth with mental health needs (TYMHN), late adolescents, and emerging adults who are receiving mental health services and experiencing transition-related difficulties. This chapter examines ways in which services and policies in the USA currently address developmental challenges of TYMHN in the transition to adulthood. A developmental-ecological framework is used, in which individuals’ health and maladjustment are seen as explicable only with reference to a particular setting and social environment. Consistent with this perspective, the chapter will focus on strategies for promoting individual adaptation to settings and social environments (positive youth developmental support) or responsiveness of settings to individual needs (ecological support), both among youth with current mental health needs and those who are at risk.


American Journal of Community Psychology | 2012

Perceptions of Family Environment and Wraparound Processes: Associations with Age and Implications for Serving Transitioning Youth in Systems of Care

Mason G. Haber; James R. Cook; Ryan P. Kilmer


Child Care Quarterly | 2010

Models to Guide System Reform for At-Risk Youth

Susan McCarter; Mason G. Haber; Donna M. Kazemi


Archive | 2013

Positive Youth Development Resources, Leadership Efficacy, and Transition Outcomes Among Young Adults in North Carolina Families United Programs

Mason G. Haber

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James R. Cook

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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Ryan P. Kilmer

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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Hewitt B. Clark

University of South Florida

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Thomas M. LaPorte

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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Nicole Deschênes

University of South Florida

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Catherine H. Fowler

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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David W. Test

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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