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MASTER TOPIC GUIDE
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Form Approved
OMB No. 0990-XXXX
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In-Depth Implementation Study
Master Topic Guide1
CONTEXT AND COUNTERFACTUAL
Community attitudes
Perception of community/school needs and how they should be addressed
Perception of the problems of teen pregnancy and risky behaviors that the program is being implemented to address
Community members and/or organizations important to the program, and how their support is critical
Steps taken to gain or maintain community and school support for the program
Outside influences that may have affected the program outcomes targeted for change
Counterfactual
Other programs and services with similar goals available to program participants and control group teens
Number of program participants participating in these programs or receiving these services
Number of teens participating in these programs or receiving these services
THE INTERVENTION
Program Development and Adoption
Name and version of the program being implemented
Process and stakeholders involved in adapting the program for schools
The process used to assess the fit of the program with organizational or school needs
Prevalence of current and past use of this program (state-level, county or district-level and/or community-based organizations that have purchased and/or implemented the program)
Target Outcomes/Theory of Change
Primary goals of the program
Outcomes targeted for change
Population targeted for change
Program’s approach to improving the targeted outcomes
Program’s main messages
Mechanisms by which program’s key features are expected to improve outcomes
Core Components of the intervention
Primary components of the program
Planned timeline for each session and overall program
Planned staffing for program
Ideal background, qualifications, experience of staff
Planned content for program
Program approach: self-efficacy and behavioral control beliefs
Type and content of materials available from the program developer and used (curriculum materials, facilitator guides, staff monitoring and evaluation tools)
Type and content of supplemental materials available
Instructional strategies prescribed by the program
Mandatory and optional components (14 required sessions plus optional topics)
Minimum requirements for program completion
Fidelity benchmarks and guidelines
Defined number and frequency of program sessions
Maximum group sizes and/or adult: youth ratios planned during instructional activities
Criteria for staff qualifications, training, and technical assistance
health educators
classroom teachers
Criteria for participants to participate, and complete the program
Minimum participation requirements and consequences for not meeting them
Performance standards and monitoring by program developer (if applicable)
Planned and Unplanned Adaptations
Changes to the curriculum or program model, and why
Changes to the schedule, duration, or frequency of sessions to accommodate context, and why
Changes to recommended program staffing to fit context, and why
Supplemental materials used, and why
Other changes to respond to needs of target population, and why
Consultation with program developer about planned adaptations
How decisions about adaptations were made and communicated to staff
How adaptations were tested and what was learned
Unplanned changes
Target Population
Description of target population (specify ethnicity, age, gender, income, socioeconomic and geographical characteristics, risk groups, affiliation with or enrollment in government or community-based programs, etc.)
Prevalence of key risk factors or risk behaviors among the target population
Prevalence of strengths or protective factors among the target population
Specific needs of target population and potential challenges in meeting these needs
Participant Eligibility and Recruitment
Planned recruitment and identification strategies for implementation sites (schools)
Program eligibility criteria for schools and participants
Number of eligible youth in targeted communities and/or schools
Actual enrollment
School’s motivation for enrolling in the intervention; most attractive features of the intervention
IMPLEMENTING ORGANIZATIONS
Site Background (schools)
Geographical locations of implementing schools
Characteristics of the general population of youth in each school (risk profile, demographic, and socioeconomic characteristics)
Characteristics of schools’ settings
Staff attitudes toward the program
Administration support for the program
How the program came to the school
“Program champions” within the school, etc.
Previous programs aimed at preventing adolescent pregnancy that have been implemented in the schools and lessons learned
Lead organization (for Health Educators)
Description of organization responsible for implementing the program in the evaluation
Organizational climate/culture
Leadership support for implementing the new program
Program champions and persons of influence
History of implementing the program and other teen pregnancy prevention programs
Experience with Making Proud Choices or other evidence-based TPP programs
Experience
Respondent’s role in the organization and with the program
Length and depth of experience
Types of training received relevant to program topics and approach
Respondent and other staff experience working with youth
Experience working with MPC and other teen pregnancy prevention programs
Community Coordination and Partners
Type and level of coordination with other community agencies to implement program activities or provide services to participants
Coordination or links with schools or school-based activities (if any)
Resources from partner agencies
History of past relationship with (formal or informal) partner organizations or agencies
Decision-making strategies and key decision-makers
Mechanisms for cross-organization collaboration and communication
Staffing
Staff recruitment process at lead organization for health educators
Staff recruitment process in schools for classroom teachers
Challenges in recruitment and hiring
Teachers
Health educators
Staff positions and minimum qualifications for health educators and classroom teachers (request job descriptions for dedicated staff)
Numbers and qualifications of staff
Health educators
Classroom teachers
Number of staff (health educators, teachers, supervisors, relevant school administrators) who have left and been replaced since evaluation period began
Reasons for turnover
How turnover is/was managed
How long vacancies have remained open and how work was managed
Decision-making and Collaboration
Communication between senior leadership (such as school administrators and organizational leaders) and program staff (health educators and classroom teachers) about important decisions related to program implementation
Strategies used to encourage staff buy-in, both within lead organization, and among classroom teachers and other school staff
Delegation of responsibility
Polices that Affect Program Implementation
State-level, county-level, city-level, school-level, or agency policies that affect program implementation
Regulations that negatively impact the program’s implementation
Structural barriers
Staff workloads or course-loads
Available supports to health educators and to classroom teachers
Adequacy and sources of resources
Financial resources
Supervision and technical support resources
Training resources
Facilities
Attitudes towards the program
Attitudes and perceptions of managerial and frontline staff (health educators and classroom teachers)
Health educator and school teachers’ attitudes about implementing MPC or control program
Particular topics or subjects that health educators and teachers support or especially like
Staff satisfaction with the support they receive for implementing MPC
Particular topics that health educators and teachers have expressed concerns about
Steps that have been taken to address staff concerns
Overall suitability of program with organization values and priorities
Overall suitability of program with school’s values and priorities
PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION
Program training and technical assistance
Approach (didactic, participatory, role-play, etc.)
Pre-service and in-service training required for health educators and classroom teachers in each site
Any variations in the types of training accessible to health educators and classroom teachers
Participation in required training sessions
Differences/similarities among health educators and teachers
Usefulness of training for health educators and teachers
Access to ongoing technical assistance in implementing the program
Sources, amount, and topics of technical assistance received by health educators and classroom teachers
Certification requirements, process, and cost
Procedures for performance monitoring of staff
Process for providing feedback and technical assistance to health educators and classroom teachers based on data collected
Communication systems
Formalized protocols and guidance for staff to follow
Frequency of communication (staff meetings, one-on-one meetings, memos, reporting, etc.) between levels and types of staff
Tracking and Monitoring
Collection of attendance data (frequency, methods, staff responsible, measures, etc.)
Collection and tracking of participant outcome data
Purpose and uses of process and outcome data
How data are used to monitor implementation and identify challenges that need to be addressed
Frequency of data monitoring
Who is involved
How the data are used
Whether data are used to assess changes to implementation procedures
Monitoring of participation
Follow-up when attendance is low
Whether the program has an ongoing CQI process in place and who is involved
Data reporting procedures
Program Costs
Total budget for implementing the program
Budgeted cost per participant
Whether actual cost was less than, about the same as, or higher than budgeted
Major program costs (staffing, external staff training and technical assistance, program materials, other)
Time spent by staff (on training, on service delivery in an average week)
Characteristics of Program and Control Group Participants
Description of youth receiving the program
Cultural or ethnic backgrounds
Strengths or protective factors
Risk factors
Personal and family characteristics, home environments
Sources of support
Relationship characteristics
Educational characteristics, needs, and goals
Perceived differences or variations among schools
Adherence to planned program (based on staff perceptions and MIS data)
Actual timeline
Actual number, frequency, and duration of sessions or visits
Types of activities conducted and the staff who conducted them
Actual training and technical assistance provided to health educators and classroom teachers
Content/program materials covered
Actual class sizes and adult: youth ratios during program sessions
Perceived differences or variations between schools
Adherence to counterfactual plan
Actual services offered and received
Actual number, frequency, and duration of sessions or visits
Types of activities conducted and the staff who conducted them
Actual training and technical assistance provided
Content/program materials covered
Attendance and participation
Actual class sizes and adult: youth ratios during program sessions or visits
Perceived differences or variations between schools
Quality of interactions during observed activity
How engaged are youth in the session
Nature of interactions between staff and youths
Extent to which health educators and classroom teachers are comfortable presenting the material
Extent to which youths are comfortable with material that is presented
Participation and engagement in program activities
Perceived levels and patterns of attendance at key program sessions and activities
Rates of program completion
Reasons for youth’s low attendance levels (as relevant)
Health educator and classroom teacher perceptions of participant engagement in program activities
Overall implementation experience
Lessons learned
Overall Challenges
Challenges in reducing risk behaviors
Challenges related to implementing program with fidelity
Challenges classroom teachers faced
Challenges health educators faced
Challenges related to implementing the program in a school setting
Challenges related to working with partner organizations or outside staff
Aspects of the program most difficult to implement, and why
Aspects of the program that worked well in the school setting, and why
Accomplishments most proud of, and why
Examples of successful implementation strategies
Steps taken to address challenges and replicate effective strategies
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1 In this and other Expanding the Use and Understanding of Evidence-Based Teen Pregnancy Prevention Programs implementation study documents, the term “program” refers to the intervention that is being implemented. The term “site” refers to the organization and places in which the program (intervention) is being implemented. The term “location” refers to a specific place in which the program is implemented within a site.
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | LocalAdmin |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-01-23 |