Studies of the effects of afterschool programs on student learning have yielded equivocal findings. This paper argues that such findings stem from weak conceptualizations of the relationship between afterschool programming and learning. The authors use socio-cultural learning theory to reveal specific dimensions of afterschool programs that have positive impact on learning, drawing on almost 200 documents from the afterschool literature to substantiate and elaborate these dimensions. Findings illuminate why afterschool programs that provide “more school after school” significantly limit students’ opportunities to learn.
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Meredith Honig
Author
Univeresity of Maryland, College Park
Morva McDonald
Author
University of Maryland, College Park
Citation
Publication Name:
Afterschool Matters
Volume:
Occasional Paper #5
Page Number:
1
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