BMC Public Health. 2025 Apr 28;25(1):1573. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-22662-y.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: It remains unknown whether home-school collaborative strategies can improve the resilience of adolescents and children from single-parent families in China.
OBJECTIVES: This study addresses the gap in resilience interventions for single-parent family students by validating a 7-week home-school collaborative intervention strategy.
METHODS: The participants were 89 primary and secondary school children from China, randomly assigned to either the experimental group (20 single-parent and 27 non-single-parent students) or the control group (20 single-parent and 22 non-single-parent students). Both groups used the Adolescent Psychological Resilience Scale to report their resilience levels during the pre-test and post-test phases. Single-parent family parents also reported their collaborative participation using a behavior checklist.
RESULTS: The experimental group exhibited higher resilience gain scores compared to the control group. The intervention effects in the experimental group remained stable for one month after the intervention ended. Additionally, the intervention at the school level fostered greater collaborative involvement from single-parent families, particularly in terms of family support participation.
CONCLUSIONS: The Home-school collaborative intervention strategy is a valuable measure for enhancing the resilience of students from single-parent families and has the potential for application within both family and school contexts.
PMID:40296030 | DOI:10.1186/s12889-025-22662-y
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