Parental substance use is the second leading cause of foster care placement. As a result, nearly 100,000 Ohio grandparents, family, friends, and neighbors are providing kinship care for children. Kinship caregivers are more likely to be of lower socioeconomic status, report less warmth and respect in their parenting attitudes, and exhibit higher levels of caregiver-child conflict, relative to traditional foster parents. These characteristics, in addition to the trauma associated with exposure to parental drug use, contribute to a significant risk for reading difficulties and lower overall academic achievement for affected children. The objective is to pilot an evidence-based reading intervention in a group of kinship caregivers and children affected by parental opioid use. This work is significant because the investigators aim to improve reading outcomes of children who may otherwise experience substantial difficulty with reading development, and to support kinship caregivers who may otherwise have few resources to promote the reading skills of children placed in their care. The approach will use a randomized (1:1) waitlist controlled trial design to examine the effects of a 15-week kinship caregiver-implemented Sit Together and Read (STAR) intervention for 4-5 year old children being raised by kin as a result of parental opioid use.
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STAR Log
Timeframe: 15-week intervention period
STAR Fidelity Coding Checklist (FCC)
Timeframe: 15-week intervention period
Preschool Word and Print Awareness (PWPA)
Timeframe: 15-week intervention period
Phonological Awareness Literacy Screening-PreK (PALS-PreK)
Timeframe: 15-week intervention period
Test of Preschool Emergent Literacy (TOPEL)
Timeframe: 15-week intervention period
Parenting Sense of Competence Scale
Timeframe: 15-week intervention period