New Door Opened: A Tracer Study of the Teenage Mother's Project, Jamaica
Findings revealed significant distinctions in educational achievement and vocational attainment between TMP and comparison group mothers, and marked differences in the school performance of the children from the respective groups. Furthermore, data revealed that TMP mothers had less than half the number of children their comparison peers produced in the same 10 year period. They also had higher Achievement Motivation, higher Assertiveness and lower Alienation levels than their peers.
The sample findings are indicative of the impact that the TMP intervention had on the lives of the 500 teenage mothers it served in the period from 1986 through 1996, in developing their resilience following the birth of their first child and arresting a negative life trend. In addition to reconfirming the earlier MSCA research, the study also supported the position that interventions that promote parenting education, strong mother-child bonding and early stimulation can have long term positive developmental impact on the child aged 0-3 years."
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