Abstract
We describe an innovative approach to teaching homeless men the critical thinking skills underlying adaptive decision making and self-regulation needed to bolster resilience in the face of multiple and complex personal challenges. Single men living in a transitional housing facility for the homeless were taught the BrainWise curriculum ( n = 210) along with other educational, career, and life skills programs, and tested 4 months later. This group was compared with a smaller control group ( n = 61) of men from the same and similar facilities. Outcomes were measured through self-reports of executive functions (Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function [BRIEF]), problem solving (Wasik Problem Solving Rating Scale [WPSRS]), coping (Coping Self-Efficacy [CSE]), and knowledge of the thinking skills taught through BrainWise (BrainWise Knowledge Survey [BKS]). All measures showed adequate internal consistency reliability and less strong, but significant, test–retest stability. As expected, self-reported skills in executive function, coping self-efficacy, problem solving, and BrainWise knowledge covaried in predictable ways. The attrition between the pretest and posttest was not predicted by any of the major outcome measures. The sample of 108 men in the Treatment Group who were still in the program 4 months later exhibited significant improvements on all BRIEF composites and subscales, CSE, and the BKS, but not on the WPSRS. In contrast, the remaining 37 Control Group men showed many fewer improvements in the BRIEF scores and a decrease in the WPSRS score. The results suggest the efficacy of BrainWise and measurement of these skills in the vulnerable population of homeless individuals; however, challenges of this type of research and limitations of this study are discussed.
Highlights
The societal problem of homelessness often appears intractable given the number of programs that have been instituted with limited success
The purpose of this study was to examine the implementation of the BrainWise curriculum in transitional housing for homeless men and its efficacy for improving the men’s executive functions, problem solving, and coping self-efficacy based on self-reports
The purpose of this study was to examine the implementation of the BrainWise curriculum in transitional housing for homeless men and its efficacy for improving the men’s selfreported executive functions, problem solving, and coping self-efficacy
Summary
The societal problem of homelessness often appears intractable given the number of programs that have been instituted with limited success. The critical thinking intervention used in the current study, the BrainWise curriculum (Gorman Barry & Welsh, 2007), is designed to provide individuals with the thinking “tools” to use personal resources, make adaptive decisions, as well as to avoid the pitfalls that have led to problematic situations in the past, and have been weakened by the systemic effects of homelessness Fostering such skills should have the eventual outcome of building a sense of independence, control, and efficacy. In February 2013, the Denver Rescue Mission (DRM) introduced and integrated the BrainWise decision making program for adults into the intervention programs it provides single men living in its transitional housing facility The objective of this project was to evaluate the effectiveness of this approach and measure the degree to which there is improvement in the self-reported executive functions, problem-solving skills, and coping self-efficacy of the participants, compared with a control group not receiving the BrainWise intervention. Religion or spirituality as a facilitator of resilience was relevant due to the focus of the specific living context of the homeless men examined in our study, and the potential that this resilience factor could interact in interesting ways with the BrainWise intervention
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