This article is about the course of depressive symptoms during a classroom-based randomized preventive field trial aimed at improving reading achievement among first-grade children in an urban population of mixed ethnicity and lower middle to low socioeconomic status. In the fall, children reported high levels of depressive symptoms, a risk factor for major depressive disorder. There was a linear relationship in the fall between depressive symptoms and achievement test scores. Among male children in intervention classrooms whose gain in achievement was at least the national average, depression from fall to spring was decreased, compared to those whose achievement gain was lower. Among female children both in the control and in the intervention classrooms, there was also a significant relationship between gain in achievement and the course of depression.
This study explored the issue of premature termination by using the client readiness variables reflected in the stages of change and processes of change proposed in J. O. transtheoretical model. This study used these variables in an attempt to distinguish between premature and nonpremature terminators in a college counseling center. Results indicated that the two termination groups were distinguishable on stages and processes of change, though some results were not predicted by the transtheoretical theory or model. Recommendations are made for future research to identify and predict clients at risk for premature termination and to determine how to avert such termination.
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