ABSTRACT
Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of simulation as a strategy to influence teens’ perceptions of pregnancy and parenting.
Design: This pilot study was a pre experimental, one group pre/posttest design.
Setting: The school-based wellness center of a high school was the setting for the weekly sessions and the pre/posttest administration.
Participants: Sample members participated in 6 weekly Baby Think it Over (BTIO) classes and an infant simulator experience.
The final sample included 79 teens age 14 to 18 years who attended one of eight BTIO sessions.
Methods: We used the Thoughts on Teen Parenting Survey (TTPS) to assess the perceptions of teens with regard to
the costs and rewards associated with teen parenting.
The TTPS yields a composite score of the teen attitudes toward the teen parenting experience and eight subscale scores that assess different areas of teen life.
Results: No significant differences were found in the mean pre/posttest scores or in correlations of the demographic data and mean scores. Two significant differences in pre/posttest subscale scores were in the areas of friends and
personal characteristics.
Conclusions: The results of this study suggest that the effectiveness of using infant simulators to influence the perceptions of teens about the reality of teen parenting is minimal.