Child Personality as Moderator of Outcome in a School‐based Intervention for Preventing Externalising Behaviour |
| |
Authors: | Sabine Stoltz Peter Prinzie Amaranta De Haan Monique van Londen Bram Orobio De Castro Maja Deković |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Utrecht University, Research Centre Psychosocial Development in Context, , The Netherlands;2. Ghent University, Department of Developmental, Personality, and Social, Psychology, , Belgium;3. Utrecht University, Department of Developmental Psychology, , The Netherlands |
| |
Abstract: | Studying moderators of intervention effects is essential to elucidate what works for whom. The present study investigated whether child personality moderates short‐term and follow‐up effects of an individualised preventive school‐based intervention for children with externalising behaviour. The sample consisted of 48 schools, with 264 fourth‐grade children displaying externalising behaviour (Mage = 10.2 years), randomly assigned to the intervention (n = 191) or no intervention control (n = 73) condition. Teachers and children reported at pretest, posttest and follow‐up test about reactive and proactive aggression. Child personality was assessed by teachers at pretest. Child conscientiousness moderated short‐term intervention effects, indicating that more organised and planful children benefited more from the intervention. Child extraversion moderated both short‐term and follow‐up intervention effects, with low extraverted children showing larger effects. These results affirm the importance of including personality as moderator of intervention effects in future studies, as interventions adapted to specific child traits might yield larger effects. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
| |
Keywords: | personality intervention reactive and proactive aggression moderation |
|
|