Testing the Efficacy of the Ability School Engagement Partnership Program (ASEP)

  • STATUS
    Recruiting
  • participants needed
    753
  • sponsor
    The University of Queensland
Updated on 16 February 2024

Summary

This project is an up-scaled test of the Ability School Engagement Partnership (ASEP) Project. The ASEP is a partnership program that aims to increase school attendance and is grounded in the theory of Third-Party-Policing (TPP). In ASEP, school-based police officers partner with schools (i.e., the third-party) who have legal powers to control and prevent school absenteeism. The ASEP intervention includes an ASEP conference in which the legal requirements to attend school are explicitly communicated in a procedurally just way to young people missing school and their parents/guardians. Restorative Outcomes Australia (ROA) is a provide provider partner who will oversee the facilitation of the ASEP conferences. While the program is designed to re-engage these young people in school and/or facilitate transitions to work and reduce antisocial behavior (e.g., delinquency), this trial will also test the capacity of the program to improve collaboration between the schools and police and also monitor young participants' future life outcomes, such as future welfare dependence.

Description

The ASEP is grounded in the theory of Third Party Policing (TPP). TPP interventions focus on controlling negative behavioral outcomes through partnerships that use a third party's legal powers. In ASEP, the police partner with the schools to work together to engage with young people, reduce their anti-social behavior and increase their school attendance. At the core of the partnership is communication of the legal lever: in ASEP, it is the Queensland Education (General Provisions) Act (2006) - requiring young people attend school up to age 16 and holding parents legally responsible. The laws are communicated to parents and young people who are not regularly attending school in a procedurally fair way within the context of an ASEP conference. The ASEP conference is especially designed to incorporate fair communication of the laws and consequences and involves a purpose-built script that seeks to increase willingness of both parents and young people to comply with the law. The ASEP conference participants include a trained facilitator (from Restorative Outcomes Australia; ROA), the young person missing a lot of school, their parent or guardian, a uniformed school-based police officer, and a school representative (e.g., teacher). An individually tailored Action Plan is developed during the conference which stipulate the "actions" that all conference participants are to take over the subsequent two months in order to ensure that the young person increases their school attendance and re-engages with school and/or transitions into paid work.

Details
Condition School Attendance, Welfare Dependence, Antisocial Behavior
Age 12years - 16years
Treatment Ability School Engagement Program Conference
Clinical Study IdentifierNCT04281966
SponsorThe University of Queensland
Last Modified on16 February 2024

Eligibility

Yes No Not Sure

Inclusion Criteria

High school aged young people only, aged 12 to 16
Have 15% or more unexplained absences over each other previous two school terms
Have no known legitimate explanation for absences (e.g., ongoing medical issue); and
Have at least one responsibly adult in their lives (e.g., parent, guardian, or carer) who provides social and/or financial support

Exclusion Criteria

None
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