Fast Track is a multisite, multicomponent preventive intervention for young children at high risk for long-term antisocial behavior. Based on a comprehensive developmental model intervention included a universal-level classroom program plus social skills training, academic tutoring, parent training, and home visiting to improve competencies and reduce problems in a high-risk group of children selected in kindergarten. At the end of Grade 1, there were moderate positive effects on children's social, emotional, and academic skills; peer interactions and social status; and conduct problems and special-education use. Parents reported less-physical discipline and greater parenting satisfaction/ease of parenting and engaged in more appropriate/consistent discipline, warmth/positive involvement, and involvement with the school. Evidence of differential intervention effects across child gender, race, site, and cohort was minimal.The problem of juvenile crime has risen more than four-fold since the early 1970s (Cook & Laub, 1997). Homicide is now the leading cause of death among urban male teenagers (Centers for Disease Control, 1991). The seriousness of this problem has led to increased interest in finding effective programs for preventing antisocial behavior among adolescents. This article describes the initial results of a comprehensive multisite program (Fast Track) for preventing serious and persistent antisocial behavior among high-risk children.The Fast Track project design is based on a model of the development of antisocial behavior derived from developmental theory and longitudinal research (Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group [CPPRG], 1992). The model focuses on individuals who begin showing conduct problems in early childhood (Moffitt, 1993;Patterson, Reid, & Dishion, 1992). These children, termed life-course-persistent offenders by Moffitt and early starters by Patterson et al., represent approximately 6% of the general population but account for almost half of all adolescent crimes (Wolfgang, Figlio, & Sellin, 1972). Early starting patterns of conduct problems are remarkably stable (Farrington, Loeber, & Van Kammen, 1990). For example, Richman, Stevenson, and Graham (1982) found that 62% of 3-year-olds with problems of impulsivity and oppositional behavior continued these problems through age 8. Almost half of all youth who initiated serious violent acts before age 11 continued this kind of offending
NIH-PA Author ManuscriptNIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript beyond age 20, twice the rate of those who began their violent careers at age 11 or 12 (Elliott, 1994).The Fast Track program involves a developmentally based, long-term multicomponent, and multisite intervention, evaluated using a randomized design with a no-intervention control group and a comprehensive multimethod set of assessment strategies (Cicchetti, 1984;Kazdin, 1987). A model of the developmental pathways associated with early starting conduct problems provided the framework for the prevention design that is des...