Program Goals/Target Population
After Deployment, Adaptive Parenting Tools (ADAPT) is a behavioral parent-training program designed specifically for military families with school-aged children. ADAPT is targeted at families with children between the ages of 4 and 12, where at least one parent has been deployed to Operations Iraqi or Enduring Freedom, or New Dawn. The program aims to improve five main positive parenting practices: 1) family problem-solving, 2) effective discipline, 3) positive involvement, 4) skill encouragement, and 5) monitoring.
Using information from empirical data, focus groups, and informant interviews, this training was based on the Parent Management Training–Oregon Model (PMTO) and tailored for military families (Gewirtz, DeGarmo, and Zamir 2018). These adaptations addressed common struggles from military families such as how combat stress reactions might influence parenting and reintegration following military culture.
Program Components
ADAPT is conducted as a group therapy session, consisting of 6 to 15 parents per group. Each session is 2 hours per week, and the program lasts for 14 weeks. Each week, the facilitators focus on a new topic while using active teaching methods, including discussion, role play, and practice.
Session 1 involves discussions on coping skills regarding deployment-related stressors and reintegration following deployment. Session 2 focuses on the use of effective parental direction to promote child cooperation. Session 3 emphasizes parents as children’s most important teachers and instructs parents on contingent positive encouragement of their children. Session 4 centers on recognizing difficult emotions following deployment, and Session 5 then deals with how to respond to those emotions, as well as the re-negotiation of familial roles after returning home.
Session 6 involves discussions on setting limits and effective discipline of children, and Session 7 covers following through with these limits by establishing family rules and strategies for negative sanctions. Session 8 focuses on family meetings and active listening skills and introduces parents to emotion coaching. Session 9 aims to help parents anticipate problems and stressors and discusses how to plan positive family activities. Session 10 builds upon Sessions 4, 5, 8, and 9, and involves instruction on how to manage conflicts and how to address children’s potential deployment-related stressors.
Session 11 discusses keeping children safe by monitoring them and their activities and peers, followed by Session 12, which encourages positive involvement in children’s academic advancement. Session 13 focuses on problem-solving communication between home and school. Session 14, the final session, centers on potential future deployments and planning for work and play between the family.
Key Personnel
Facilitators of the ADAPT Program are both military (i.e., National Guard and veterans) and non-military service providers (such as social workers and counselors), who receive 11 days of training and biweekly coaching from other staff certified in the PMTO model.
Program Theory
The ADAPT Program was built upon the social interaction learning (SIL) model, developed by Patterson and colleagues (Patterson, 2005), which examined how children’s adjustment was affected by parenting in stressful family contexts (Gewirtz, DeGarmo, and Zamir 2018). The SIL model suggests that parenting during stressful family contexts affects a child’s adjustment due to an increase in the frequency and/or rate of harsh discipline. The SIL model forms the basis of the PMTO program, which targets the reduction of coercive discipline by improving positive parenting skills. The PMTO model was then modified specifically for military families to create the ADAPT Program.