The Baby Elmo Program: Improving teen father-child interactions within juvenile justice facilities
The aim of the Baby Elmo Program is to establish a low-cost, sustainable parenting and structured visitation program for non-custodial incarcerated teen parents. The program is taught and supervised by probation staff in juvenile detention facilities and unlike traditional programs, this intervention is not based on increasing the teen's abstract parenting knowledge, but rather in building a relationship between the teen and his child. The sessions target the interactional quality of the relationship by introducing relationship, communication, and socio-emotional enhancing techniques. Because the intervention is conducted in the context of parent-child visits, it fosters hands-on learning and increases the opportunity for contact between these young parents and their children, a benefit in itself. Twenty father-infant dyads, with infants ranging in age from 6 to 36Â months, participated in the present preliminary evaluation of the program. Individual growth curve analyses showed significant gains in five of six measures of emotional responsiveness with the age of infant as a significant covariate. These results indicate improvements in positive high quality interactions and communication during sessions between infants and their incarcerated parents and this increase in the interactional quality of the relationship increases the likelihood that the incarcerated teen and child will form and maintain a positive relationship with one another.
Year of publication: |
2011
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Authors: | Barr, Rachel ; Brito, Natalie ; Zocca, Jaclyn ; Reina, Samantha ; Rodriguez, Jennifer ; Shauffer, Carole |
Published in: |
Children and Youth Services Review. - Elsevier, ISSN 0190-7409. - Vol. 33.2011, 9, p. 1555-1562
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Juvenile justice Parental incarceration Parent-child interactions |
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