Cambridge Somerville Youth Study

The Cambridge Somerville Youth Study was commissioned in 1936 by Dr. Richard Cabot, a Boston physician who proposed an experiment to evaluate the effects of early intervention in preventing or lowering rates of juvenile delinquency. It was started in 1939 by Edwin Powers and Helen Witmer.[1][2]

Planning

In the study 506 boys, ages 5 to 13 years old who lived in youth facilities in eastern Massachusetts were selected and carefully matched into either a treatment group or a control group. The boys in the treatment group were assigned a counselor and received academic tutoring, medical and psychiatric attention, referrals to YMCA, Boy Scouts, summer camps and community programs. Boys in the control group only were told to report regularly.[1][3][4]

Follow-up studies

In the initial and ten year follow up, there was either no difference or a higher rate of negative results as reported by the authors.[1] 30 years after the initial experiment about 95% of the participants were tracked down through public records and surveyed by Joan McCord.[4][5]

McCord reported: The program had no impacts on juvenile arrest rates measured by official or unofficial records. The program also had no impacts on adult arrest rates. There were no differences between the two groups in the number of serious crimes committed, age at when a first crime was committed, age when first committing a serious crime, or age after no serious crime was committed. A larger proportion of criminals from the treatment group went on to commit additional crimes than their counterparts in the control group.[4]

Later conclusions

In 1981, McCord published the results of a study of the data from the Cambridge-Somerville Youth Study to find out why the program had damaging results. She formulated four hypotheses: (1) that counselors imposed middle-class values on lower-class youth, which values simply did not work for them; (2) that counselors caused the boys in the treatment group to become dependent on them and, when the program ended, those boys lost a source of support; (3) that youth in the treatment group suffered a labeling effect; and (4) that the support of the counselors raised expectations of the boys in the treatment group which could not be sustained, and disillusionment set in after the program was completed.[2][4][6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Cabot, P.S. deQ. (June 1940). "A Long-Term Study of Children: The Cambridge-Somerville Youth Study". Child Development. 11 (2): 143–151. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8624.1940.tb04293.x. JSTOR 1125845.
  2. 1 2 Crime And Family: Joan McCord; Vol. 17 No. 11 (November, 2007) pp.846-850
  3. Powers, Edwin (1951). An experiment in the prevention of delinquency. NY: Columbia University Press.
  4. 1 2 3 4 McCord, Joan (2007(original published in 1978)). "A thirty-year follow-up of treatment effects". Crime And Family: Selected Essays Of Joan McCord. Temple University Press (original published by American Psychological Association in American Psychologist). ISBN 9781592135585. Retrieved January 13, 2013. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. "Cambridge-Somerville Youth Study". ChildTrends. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  6. Powers, E (1951). An experiment in the prevention of delinquency. NY: Columbia University Press.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.