Standards for Evidence and Evidence for Standars : the case of school-based drug prevention
By: PETROSINO, Anthony.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Thousand Oaks : Sage Publications, May 2003Subject(s): School-Based Drug Prevention; Drug Abuse Prevention; Research Reviews; Evidence-Based PolicyThe Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science 587, p. 180-207Abstract: The Campbell Collaboration Crime and Justice Group continues to focus on issues of evidence: what studies count in a systematic review and how many studies are needed to claim an intervention works. They are not alone. Since the mid-1990s, a number of similar efforts have sprung up to provide guidance to policy makers who wish to adopt programs to prevent violence or drug use. Many of these are particulary relevant to shool-based drug prevention programs. This article describes seven efforts to produce guides to research-based programs, focusing on the standars adopted to determine what evidence counts and how much of it is necessary to determine that it worked. The author concludes with a discussion of some of the issues raised by this reviewThe Campbell Collaboration Crime and Justice Group continues to focus on issues of evidence: what studies count in a systematic review and how many studies are needed to claim an intervention works. They are not alone. Since the mid-1990s, a number of similar efforts have sprung up to provide guidance to policy makers who wish to adopt programs to prevent violence or drug use. Many of these are particulary relevant to shool-based drug prevention programs. This article describes seven efforts to produce guides to research-based programs, focusing on the standars adopted to determine what evidence counts and how much of it is necessary to determine that it worked. The author concludes with a discussion of some of the issues raised by this review
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