The U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) has developed the Relationships,
Education, Advancement, and Development for Youth for Life (READY4Life) Program. This is a
16-hour program for immigrants/refugees, ages 14 to 24. The program is designed to help young
immigrants and refugees prepare for a successful life in the United States. The program is
taught by USCRI program staff and is being implemented at eight sites across the U.S.:
Cleveland, Ohio; Colchester, Vermont; Des Moines, Iowa; Miami, Florida; Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania; Raleigh, North Carolina; Saint Paul, Minnesota; and Twin Falls, Idaho. The
project also includes a rigorous evaluation component, featuring a Randomized Control Trial
(RCT) design.
Relationships, Education, Advancement, and Development for Youth for Life (READY4Life) will
strengthen and promote healthy marriages among young refugees and immigrants through
education and comprehensive case management that will support an overall goal of helping
youth build healthy relationship skills while supporting positive socioemotional development
and promoting successful transitions to young adulthood. USCRI's READY4Life program will
serve refugee and immigrant youth ages 14 to 24, including but not limited to those
individuals receiving, or who previously received TANF and/or individuals who are eligible
for TANF assistance; non-custodial and custodial single parents; low-income, at-risk
individuals; parenting youth; individuals with disabilities; and other eligible demographics,
with a focus on underserved populations.
The Relationship Education curriculum, that was successfully used with an adult
refugee/immigrant population, has been adapted for youth into a 16-hour curriculum composed
of 1-, 2- and 4-hour sessions. Sessions are spaced a week apart to accommodate both federal
requirements and research that shows relationship skills are best learned when practiced over
time. . READY4Life will include ten communication and conflict resolution skills, as well as
content information about effects of trauma on emotional stability and relationships,
characteristics and advantages of healthy marriage, setting and achieving financial
priorities and goals. Adaptations of the four core skills are taught: Expression Skills,
Showing Understanding Skills, Discussion Skills, and Problem-Solving Skills. In the remaining
hours of the curriculum, six additional skills are taught: Coaching and Conflict Management
Skills, Self-Change and Helping Others Change Skills, and Generalization Skills and
Maintenance Skills. Though not a part of the 10 Relationship Enhancement skills, time will
also be devoted to financial management and making progress towards greater economic
stability.
The four primary research questions deal with: 1) Communication skills; 2) Conflict
resolution, conflict management, and problem-solving skills; 3) Healthy relationship and
marriage skills; 4) Progress towards greater economic stability. We have selected these
research questions because we believe, and the literature supports the position, that these
factors are of major importance in helping youth make a successful transition from
adolescence to adulthood.
The intervention participants will receive the IDEALS curriculum for community participants
ages 14 to 24. Total: 16 hours per intervention participant (3,600 total intervention
participants).
The control group will not receive the curriculum (1,200 total control participants). Note:
once the control participants have completed the pre-test questionnaire, post-test
questionnaire and six-month follow-up, they will be eligible to receive the intervention
services, but they will not be counted as an intervention participant. Their participation in
the evaluation will end once the six-month follow-up questionnaire is collected.
Educational Evaluators, Inc. (EEI) is the local evaluator on this project working with
USCRI's READY4Life Program. We also want grantee staff to understand the importance of
evaluation and to be familiar with the evaluation protocols. By working closely together from
the initial development of the proposal and picking up that collaboration as soon as the
grant award was made, the evaluation staff and the grantee staff work together to understand
all dimensions of the program. We believe this strengthens the overall evaluation, since EEI
is not simply looking in as outsiders, but has provided training in all evaluation procedures
to all grantee project staff including the Project Director, Program Coordinators, and Data
Collection Specialists. This again, strengthens the evaluation.
Random Assignment. Participants will be randomly assigned the intervention group or the
control group in a 3:1 ratio. Thus, of the total number of participants per year, 25% will be
assigned to the control group, and the remaining 75% will be assigned to the intervention
group. The evaluation team will use a random number generator created by Qualtrics to assign
subjects to the intervention or control as described above. Demographic data for the
intervention group will be compared with the control group to determine whether there are
group differences on any of the demographic variables. If differences are detected between an
intervention group and control group, then that variable will be used as a co-variate when
comparing groups relative to outcome variables.
The unit of analysis will be the individual participant, refugee/immigrant youth, ages 14-24.
Many participants will be youth enrolled in high school grades 9-12, although participants up
to the age of 24 will be eligible for enrollment. The program will not be provided during the
school day, as part of the school curriculum. Some schools, however, will allow us to use the
school facilities to provide the program in an after-school setting. The schools providing
after-school settings have high percentages of English Language Learners and immigrant and
refugee student populations. Several are part of the Refugee School Impact Working Group,
offer the Success Management Academy Program targeting recent arrivals to the US, or come
from districts offering Newcomer Centers serving immigrant and refugee students.
This project targets low-income and at-risk, refugee and immigrant youth, ages 14-24. The
target population will not differ from those who will be broadly served by the grant.
Participants will be young people who self-identify as refugees or immigrants.
An instrument was developed after a comprehensive review of the intervention to be
implemented. This instrument is aligned with the research questions and hypotheses developed.
The Local Evaluation Questionnaire (LEQ) contains 5 demographic questions and 55 questions to
answer the primary and secondary research questionsThe four primary research questions deal
with: 1) Communication skills; 2) Conflict resolution, conflict management, and
problem-solving skills; 3) Healthy relationship and marriage skills; 4) Progress towards
greater economic stability. We have selected these research questions because we believe, and
the literature supports the position, that these factors are of major importance in helping
youth make a successful transition from adolescence to adulthood.
Statistical Power. Statistical power for evaluation of this study's hypotheses was calculated
using Optimal Design Software for Multilevel and Longitudinal Research Version 3.01. Power
calculations were computed to estimate minimum detectable effect sizes based on group
comparisons over time, with an alpha of .05 and power of .80.
Adequate power to detect small to moderate effect sizes (δ = .35) will be present if the
total variance in the outcomes explained by the difference between groups is small
(intervention correlation ρ =.05). If the intervention correlation is moderate (ρ = 0.10),
the minimum detectable effect size will be moderate (δ = 0.46). With a much smaller sample,
Denny and Young (2006) found statistically significant results for changes in knowledge,
attitudes, hopelessness, self-efficacy, and sexual intent, with effect sizes, measured by Eta
square, ranging from .029-.170. Based on this previous work, we feel confident the study will
be sufficiently powered to examine the effects of interest.
Statistical Analyses. Frequency counts and percentages will be used to report the
characteristics of the sample. Factor analysis will be used to confirm that the items
comprising a given variable load together on a single factor. Cronbach's alpha will be used
to examine internal consistency of the items comprising the four outcome variables.
Descriptive statistics will be used, reporting means and standard deviations for the four
outcome variables. Differences by group, relative to demographic variables, such as gender
and race, will be examined using chi-square. Data will also be analyzed using analysis of
covariance. The pretest score of the outcome measure under consideration will be used as the
covariate. Data will again be analyzed using analysis of covariance, but not only using the
pretest score as a covariate, but also treatment dose level, and nationality.