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Comprehensive Elementary School AIDS Education
Research Method: Intervention Research
Principal Investigators: David J. Schonfeld, M.D., Yale University (PI), Jean J. Schensul, Ph.D. (Co-PI), Mary Schwab-Stone, M.D., Yale University (Co-PI)
Grant: Maternal and Child Health Bureau; The William T. Grant Foundation
Partners: Yale University School of Medicine, Yale University Child Study Center
Dates of Study: 1998-2003

Abstract
The Comprehensive Elementary School AIDS Education project addresses gaps in current preadolescent and adolescent AIDS education by offering a comprehensive approach to HIV/AIDS prevention for elementary and middle school aged children of diverse ethnic backgrounds. Past research indicates that it is more effective to either delay the age of initiation of sexual intercourse and/or prevent the adoption of unsafe practices than to intervene once patterns of sexual activity are established among adolescents; early sexual activity rarely is followed by abstinence. An effective HIV/AIDS prevention program for teens and young adults must therefore begin before they become sexually active, i.e., in during their elementary school years. The Elementary AIDS Education project tests such a program in New Haven, CT public elementary schools through a comprehensive risk prevention curriculum based on social cognitive and social influence theories and through the training and use of peer educators. The AIDS prevention curriculum is embedded in the district-wide social development program, and tested in a randomized group of students from 5th to 7th grade (N = approx. 1,500). The project includes a process evaluation component that looks at treatment administration, integrity and acceptability, and the prevention impact of the peer-education component on peer-educators and students.
Project Goals and Objectives
Investigate the impact of a comprehensive elementary AIDS education curriculum on risk behavior and key variables that influence risk (e.g., perceptions of vulnerability, fears about AIDS, peer sexual norms, and perceived self-efficacy).
Evaluate the impact of the intervention and training program on peer educators recruited from the middle schools.
Assess the implementation of the project through a process evaluation that looks at treatment administration, integrity and acceptability, and the effects of the peer education component.
Project Details
Teachers from schools selected for intervention were trained in the curriculum and assisted in the classroom by facilitators from the district's social development office. Project staff based at Yale University were in charge of the main project activities: curriculum development, training of teachers and social development facilitators, and training and support of peer educators. ICR staff coordinated the process evaluation. Implementation of the intervention was completed in Spring 2002, and process evaluators are completing data analysis. Collection of data for the process evaluation included interviews of teachers, social development staff, and peer educators. Staff also conducted observations of various project activities: teacher and facilitator training, classroom implementation, meetings between project staff, peer educator trainings, and peer educators in the classroom. The evaluation also included documentation of changes and adaptations in the curriculum, in teacher training, and in the peer education component throughout the lifetime of the project.

Project Contact:
Jean J. Schensul, Ph.D.,
Co-Principal Investigator
Executive Director

Susanne Fest, Ed.D.
Research Associate

Project Staff:
ICR
Jean J. Schensul, Ph.D.,
Co-Principal Investigator
Susanne Fest, Ed.D., Research Associate

Yale University
David J. Schonfeld, M.D., Principal Investigator
Kim Freudigman, Ph.D., Project Coordinator
Mary Schwab-Stone, M.D., Co-Principal Investigator
Domenic Chicchetti, Ph.D., Co-Investigator
Mickey Kavanagh, M.S.,
Co-Investigator

Link to Research Methods page

Link to Intervention Research Methods page

External Links:
Yale University School of Medicine
Yale University Child Study Center

Publications and Presentations

Schonfeld D: Children's understanding of HIV/AIDS and School-based Education. St. Mary's Hospital, Paediatric Grand Rounds, July 5, 1999, London, England.

Schonfeld D: Children's Perceptions of AIDS. Invited Interdisciplinary Seminar, Göteborg University and Östra University Hospital, August 27, 1997, Göteborg, Sweden.

Schonfeld D: Children and HIV. Invited seminar sponsored by Leeds Metropolitan University, Faculty of Health and Social Care and Leeds City Council, HIV, Sexual Health and Drugs Unit, Leeds Civic Hall, July 4, 1997, Leeds, England.

"AIDS prevention education for elementary school children" - October 26, 2000 Workshop presented with Mickey Kavanagh for the State Department of Education, CT

"Children's developmental understanding of HIV and AIDS" - September 21, 1999 National Consultants Meeting on Integrating HIV, other STD, and Teen Pregnancy Prevention Programs, Atlanta, GA

"HIV Prevention Education with Elementary School-Age Children" - October 20, 1998 Hartford HIV Forum, sponsored by the HIV Action Initiative and the Institute for Community Research St Francis Hospital, Hartford, CT