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<title>RECIPROCAL PEER TUTORING AND MULTISYSTEMIC THERAPIES AND OFFENDING BEHAVIOUR OF OUT-OF-SCHOOL ADOLESCENTS IN MOTOR PARKS IN OGUN STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2008" rel="alternate"/>
<subtitle/>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2008</id>
<updated>2026-04-21T06:09:25Z</updated>
<dc:date>2026-04-21T06:09:25Z</dc:date>
<entry>
<title>RECIPROCAL PEER TUTORING AND MULTISYSTEMIC THERAPIES AND OFFENDING BEHAVIOUR OF OUT-OF-SCHOOL ADOLESCENTS IN MOTOR PARKS IN OGUN STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2009" rel="alternate"/>
<author>
<name>ADEYEMO, Waliat Folasade</name>
</author>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2009</id>
<updated>2024-04-25T07:44:59Z</updated>
<published>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</published>
<summary type="text">RECIPROCAL PEER TUTORING AND MULTISYSTEMIC THERAPIES AND OFFENDING BEHAVIOUR OF OUT-OF-SCHOOL ADOLESCENTS IN MOTOR PARKS IN OGUN STATE, NIGERIA
ADEYEMO, Waliat Folasade
Offending Behaviour (OB), a transgression against norms and social order, is generally&#13;
detested by society and the criminal justice system. Extant literature has shown that outof-school adolescents in motor parks in Ogun State exhibit high offending behaviour.&#13;
Previous studies on OB largely focused on the influence of environmental and parental&#13;
factors with little attention paid to interventions such as reciprocal peer tutoring and&#13;
multisystemic therapy. This study, therefore, was designed to determine the effects&#13;
of Reciprocal Peer Tutoring (RPT) and Multisystemic (MT) therapies on OB among&#13;
out-of-school adolescents in Motor Parks in Ogun State, Nigeria. The moderating&#13;
effects of Peer Influence (PI) and Self-control were also examined.&#13;
Albert Bandura’s Social Learning and Jeremy Bentham’s Rational Choice theories&#13;
were adopted as the framework, while the pretest-posttest control quasi-experimental&#13;
design with a 3×2×2 factorial matrix was utilised. Three local governments (Abeokuta&#13;
North – Lafenwa; Ado Odo-Ota – Sango-ota; and Sagamu – Isale Oko) were&#13;
purposively selected based on the high number of out-of-school adolescents in the&#13;
motor parks. The participants were screened with the Modified Criminal&#13;
Sentiments Scale (r=0.73); and those who scored 25 and above were selected. The&#13;
participants were assigned to RPT (29), MT (30), and control (30) groups. The&#13;
instruments used were OB (r=0.79), PI (r=0.71), and Self-control (r=0,70) scales. The&#13;
treatment lasted eight weeks. The data were analysed using Analysis of covariance and&#13;
Scheffe post-hoc test at 0.05 level of significance.&#13;
The participants’ age was 17.35±1.50 years, and 95% were males. Against the threshold&#13;
of 25.1, their PI (&#119909;̅=35.9) and Self-control (&#119909;̅=32.5) were high. There was a significant&#13;
main effect of treatment on OB (F(2; 86)=246.81; partial η2=0.88). The participants in the&#13;
MT group had the highest reduced post-OB mean score (33.07), followed by those in&#13;
RPT (36.86) and control (63.17) groups. There were significant main effects of PI&#13;
(F(2; 86)=29.52; partial η2=0.44) and Self-control (F(2; 86)=8.71; partial η2=0.20) on&#13;
participants’ OB. The participants with low PI had the highest reduced post-OB mean&#13;
score (36.85), followed by those in moderate PI (44.21) and high PI (52.47) in the&#13;
MST group. The participants with high Self-control had the highest reduced post-OB&#13;
mean score (34.03), followed by those in moderate Self-control (49.57) and low Selfcontrol (57.48) groups. There were significant two-way interaction effects of treatment&#13;
and PI (F(2; 86)=11.56; partial η2=0.33); treatment and Self-control (F(2; 86)=5.76; partial&#13;
η2=0.20); and PI and Self-control (F(2, 86)=10.77; partial η2=0.32), in favour of low PI,&#13;
high Self-control from the MT; low PI and high Self-control from the RPT groups,&#13;
respectively. The three-way interaction effect was significant (F(2; 86)=3.69; partial&#13;
η2=0.10), in favour of participants with high Self-control and low PI from RPT.&#13;
Multisystemic, more than Reciprocal peer tutoring therapy reduced offending&#13;
behaviour of out-of-school adolescents in motor parks in Ogun State, Nigeria.&#13;
Counselling psychologists should adopt these therapies in managing offending&#13;
behaviour among out-of-school adolescents, with consideration to peer influence&#13;
and self-control.
</summary>
<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</entry>
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