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CICC's Effective Black Parenting Program (EBPP) is the country's first culturally-adapted parenting skill-building
program for parents of African American children. Its initial development in the 1970's was stimulated by the fact
that none of the then-existing parenting skill-building programs were designed specifically for African Americans.
Some of the then-existing programs, and especially behaviorally-based parent training programs like
Confident
Parenting, had been shown to produce positive results with African American parents (including inner city
African American parents) but they did not address issues that were particular to African Americans (such
as the impact of slavery on African American child rearing and the need to convey positive messages about
cultural heritage) nor did they honor traditions in African American family life. In 1976 CICC was successful in convincing the Minority Mental Health Center in the National Institute of Mental Health to underwrite a project that allowed for:
All of the research with African American parents, the new instructional units, and the field test results of using the new units with the three programs are contained in the book, Black Parenting: Strategies for Training by Dr. Kerby T. Alvy, the project director, which was published by Irvington Publishers of New York. In 1985, CICC obtained a three-year prevention research grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) to conduct a controlled study with the Confident Parenting-based version. In preparing for this study, CICC reworked the design of the program so that the cultural units and issues became both dominant and totally integrated with the teaching of the Confident Parenting Program skills. Thus, a "new" parenting skill-building program was created, the Effective Black Parenting Program, which contained another program within it, the Confident Parenting Program. The successful field testing of the new Effective Black Parenting Program through the NIDA research grant will be described below. For now, and in summary, the history of CICC's EBBP began with a recognition of the need for a parenting skill-building program that addressed issues that are specific to African Americans. New research information on the parenting of African Americans was collected and used to create new instructional units that could be taught side-by-side with existing programs. In a study where this new research-based content was taught with the existing programs, the result show that risk and protective factors were positively impacted. Then, the new content was carefully integrated around and into one of the existing programs (the Confident Parenting Program which in and of itself had accumulated research to show its effectiveness) to create what has become known as CICC's Effective Black Parenting Program, which is now the most widely used and accepted parenting program in African American communities nationwide. Theoretical Assumptions and Outcomes Expected All theories of problem behavior (whether they are theories about the causes of substance abuse, juvenile delinquency, gang participation, youth violence, child abuse and child behavior problems) bring attention to the nature of relationship between children and their parents and to the ways that parents raise children. Whether one assumes a theoretical perspective of a Social-Ecological, Developmental or Ecological-Developmental nature, all perspectives implicate the child-parent relationship and the quality of parenting as being important in whether a child does or does not engage in problem behaviors. CICC's EBPP draws on all of these perspectives in its emphasis on providing parents with training to (1) help them enhance the quality of their relationships with their children, and to (2) employ parenting strategies and skills that research has shown to be most helpful in raising pro-social, competent and healthy children. For example, the EBPP teaches parents many skills to help them become more warm and accepting of their children's characteristics and abilities, and it teaches non-violent disciplinary skills to help them to be firm and fair in how to they guide and supervise their children's development. High parental warmth and acceptance mixed with firm and fair discipline has been shown to be the most effective parenting pattern (the authoritative parenting pattern) for helping children to become successful and healthy adults. CICC's EBPP also draws on the idea that parenting programs that respect and honor one's culture are not only maximally effective in getting parents to use the skills that they teach. These programs also lead to a sense of group ownership and are seen as vehicles for advancing the group as a whole, goals and outcomes that are unlikely with non-culturally specific interventions. So the long range goals for program participants is to have them guide their children's development away from delinquency, dropping out and substance abuse, and to have them experience a sense of pride in their heritage and people that will keep hope alive for a better day for them and their children. Short-term goals are to reduce family risk factors for problem behavior and increase family protective factors, as well as to reduce child risk factors and increase child protective factors.
The EBPP has become the program of choice for hundreds of institutions nationwide that serve African Americans.
These institutions have different missions, including institutions whose missions are substance abuse prevention,
child abuse prevention, delinquency prevention and school reform (see list of
the institutions nationwide that
have had their staff trained to deliver the EBPP and other CICC programs like Confident Parenting and Los Niños
Bien Educados. Approximately 60% of the institutions on this list had staff members trained to deliver the EBPP).
EBPP has also become the program of choice by historically Black religious denominations as part of the Black
Family Ministry Project of the National Council of Churches. Thus, nearly every type of health and human service,
educational and faith group has found the EBPP to be worthy of use. Depending upon the mission and clientele of
these groups, the program has been used in a Universal, Selected and Indicated manner. The program has most
frequently been used with Selected, High Risk Populations.
Several examples of the research findings and the new cultural content were mentioned earlier. In addition to the new
cultural content, several new general parenting strategies were created (including a Thinking Parent's Approach to
assessing the causes of child misbehavior, and an approach to understanding family rules which makes it easier for
parents to focus on children when they are following the rules). Coverage of such important topics as substance
abuse prevention and single parenting was also included. Then, in 1996 when the EBPP was revised and upgraded,
greater emphasis was placed on the value of collective responsibility for raising African American children.
In addition, 40 African proverbs were added to the teaching of the program, including "Children are the reward
of life" and "A shepherd does not strike his sheep." The proverbs are used in presenting every program concept
and skill, which serves to ground the teachings of the program in the wisdom of the African ancestors.
The Culturally-Specific Parenting Strategies, the General Parenting Strategies (including strategies from the
Confident Parenting Program), the Basic Parenting Skills
(all from the Confident Parenting Program) and the
Special Program Topics that constitute the entire EBPP are displayed below.
CICC's Effective Black Parenting Program Content
During the program, parents are encouraged to bring in one or more members of their extended families to get an
appreciation of what they are learning and to gain support for it. Toward the end of the program, the trainer
encourages parents to continue to meet for mutual support and skill enhancement booster sessions as a Harrambee
(Friendship) Club.
Evaluation studies on the EBPP have been appeared in the Journal of Community Psychology (Volume 20, April 1992),
in research monographs published by the Center for the Improvement of Child Caring, and in in-house publications
of other institutions who have used the program. They were summarized in the book, Parent Training Today: A
Social Necessity, by Dr. Alvy. This book also includes reports on the research with African Americans that
was used in creating the content of the program.
The major evaluation study emerged from the 1985-1988 NIDA-sponsored research project that was conducted in South
Central Los Angeles and it is herein described:
All of the instructors that delivered the program during this field test where extensively trained in how to
run the program and they followed the scripted Instructor's Manual as they ran the program to increase
fidelity of program implementation.
The test battery was administered during in-home interviews with the parents. Carefully trained African
American graduate students who were blind to which groups they were interviewing, did the interviewing.
Some of the data analyses that were done for different research reports and articles included statistical
controls for parental and family risk factors that could impact program outcomes, including chronic family
strains (as indexed by Illfeld's Social Role Strain Questionnaire), socioeconomic level, parental substance
abuse and parental mental health (as indexed by Hopkin's Symptom Checklist). Thus, for some reports a test
was used as an outcome measure and for others as a co-variate.
The article that appeared in the Journal of Community Psychology included reports on the results of Multivariate
Analyses of Covariance (MANCOVAs) which were run to test for program effects on parental acceptance-rejection,
parenting practices, family relationship and on child behavior problems and social competencies. Those analyses
used family role strains, SES level, parental substance abuse and mental health status as covariates.
Other analyses of this evaluation research which appears in CICC research monographs show that there were significant reductions in parental mental health symptoms as a result of program participation. Here again the program served to reduce another family risk factor for delinquency and substance abuse, parental psychological dysfunction. As has been indicated, the program is being used by thousands of institutions nationwide and some of these institutions have conducted their own evaluative research. For example, the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services, the largest child welfare department in the country, has incorporated the EBPP into a large, multi-service effort called the Black Family Investment Project and they have had evaluators assess the impact of their project. They found that involvement in the project resulted in court-referred families making significant reductions in use of harsh disciplinary practices and their children becoming more cooperative and supervisable. This study also showed that participation in the project reduced recidivism and foster home placements to a significant degree (Turner-Suttle, 1993).
The 5-day intensive workshops cover the entire curriculum of the program and provide opportunities for
the participants to deliver sections of the curriculum and to receive constructive feedback from the
trainer and other participants. These workshops are for 15 to 25 participants, and are usually conducted
for five days in succession. CICC schedules workshops in different cities on an annual basis, and it
also schedules workshops on an as-needed basis when a state or county agency or a school district or
church group contracts with CICC for a special workshop for their personnel only.
The workshops are evaluated by the participants using standard evaluation forms. The trainer also
uses standard forms to evaluate each workshop participant. Successful participants receive certificates
of workshop completion.
The current fee per workshop participant is $925 which covers the cost of the 5 days of professional
training and the complete Instructor's Kit of training materials. The price
of the Kit is currently $413.
Separate leader guides, parent guides and recruitment flyers are available for teaching and implementing
the one-day seminar version of the program. To run the one-day seminar version, it is also necessary to
have the Instructor's Manual and the Instructional Transparencies.
CICC also distributes a wide range of other publications for parents of
African American children which
have been used as supplementary materials to the program and for broadening the education of program instructors.
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