TY - JOUR PY - 2012// TI - Educational-entertainment as an intervention with black adolescents exposed to community violence JO - Journal of prevention and intervention in the community A1 - Allen, Valerie Dorsey A1 - Solomon, Phyllis SP - 313 EP - 324 VL - 40 IS - 4 N2 - Witnessing violence is one adverse childhood experience (ACE) associated with living in impoverished Black urban communities. Youth with higher violence avoidance self-efficacy and positive coping are more likely to avoid violence. This study evaluates educational entertainment (edutainment) as an intervention with Black adolescents exposed to community violence. Edutainment has shown success in increasing self-efficacy and positive coping skills in other domains. Self-administered scales were used to measure stress, anxiety, violence avoidance self-efficacy, and coping strategies. Data were collected pre- and nine days post-interventions/no intervention from 20 subjects receiving the edutainment intervention, 19 subjects participating in a group discussion about violence, and 21 subjects receiving no intervention (N = 60). Edutainment and no intervention were more effective than group discussion alone in increasing violence avoidance self-efficacy. Violence avoidance self-efficacy was found to have an intervening relationship between edutainment and the outcome of stress. This study indicates limited but positive effects for edutainment.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1085-2352 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10852352.2012.707452 ID - ref1 ER -