2017
DOI: 10.1037/pas0000409
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How well do juvenile risk assessments measure factors to target in treatment? Examining construct validity.

Abstract: There has been a surge of interest in using 1 type of risk assessment instrument to tailor treatment to juveniles to reduce recidivism. Unlike prediction-oriented instruments, these reduction-oriented instruments explicitly measure variable risk factors as "needs" to be addressed in treatment. There is little evidence, however, that the instruments accurately measure specific risk factors. Based on a sample of 237 serious juvenile offenders (M = 18, SD = 1.6), we tested whether California Youth Assessment Inve… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 54 publications
(66 reference statements)
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“…Five other states utilize YASI statewide including Hawaii, Illinois, New York, Vermont, and Virginia. Note, though not implemented statewide, the California Division of Juvenile Justice has adopted the use of a modified YASI instrument known as the CA-YASI (Kennealy et al, 2017; Skeem et al, 2017). Finally, YASI is also used in the UK and Canada (Jones et al, 2016).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Five other states utilize YASI statewide including Hawaii, Illinois, New York, Vermont, and Virginia. Note, though not implemented statewide, the California Division of Juvenile Justice has adopted the use of a modified YASI instrument known as the CA-YASI (Kennealy et al, 2017; Skeem et al, 2017). Finally, YASI is also used in the UK and Canada (Jones et al, 2016).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This relationship has since continued for nearly two decades. Though reportedly subject to an initial norming process, and further evaluations completed elsewhere (Jones et al, 2014, 2016; Kennealy et al, 2017; Orbis Partners, 2007; Scott et al, 2019; Skeem et al, 2017), the instrument’s use has gone untested within this predominantly rural Midwestern state.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In practice, when risk assessment is divorced from needs assessment, the former is often subject to empirical scrutiny while “anything goes” for the latter (see Skeem, Barnoski, Latessa, Robinson, & Tjaden, 2013). In reality, the core empirical requirement for a valid risk assessment (i.e., utility in predicting recidivism) is much easier to satisfy than that of a valid needs assessment (i.e., utility in measuring specific constructs that, when changed, reduce recidivism; see Monahan & Skeem, 2014; Skeem, Kennealy, Tatar, Hernandez, & Keith, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Almost no studies have tested the construct validity of “needs” assessments to determine whether given scales measure what they say they measure. In an exception, Skeem et al (2017) tested the correspondence between scales on a widely marketed juvenile risk‐needs assessment (e.g., “social‐cognitive skills”) and existing, well‐validated measures of those constructs (e.g., the Psychological Inventory of Criminal Thinking Styles; Walters, 1990). The authors found that scales labeled as violence‐aggression, social‐cognitive skills, social influences, education/employment, and family did not translate to treatment‐relevant target constructs of anger/hostility, executive function deficits, antisocial peer influence, poor school/work motivation, or problematic parental discipline and monitoring, respectively.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%