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resource research Public Programs
This article presents strategies youth development programs can use to fortify relationships and foster identity development as a way to help bolster the academic performance of girls of color.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Amy Muno
resource research Public Programs
Students will apply themselves to learning if the context interests them. Focusing on a subject close to middle school students' hearts, such as fashion, rather than on specific academic tasks such as writing or researching, builds intrinsic motivation for learning. This article explores the Fabulous Fashions program, which engages students in mathematics and literacy through the context of their interest in fashion.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Anne Thompson
resource research Public Programs
A 4-H program embeds science learning in an entrepreneurial program in which youth plant, harvest, and market their own produce.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Jrene Rahm Kenneth Grimes
resource research Public Programs
This article describes Youth as Resources, a nationwide initiative involves youth and adults as equal partners in projects that improve community life. Some examples of the projects include the Rural Renewable Energy Alliance, which engages teenagers to install solar heating in low income homes, and the Haydenville Preservation Committee, which implemented neighborhood cleanup and landscaping projects in rural Ohio.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Shaun Butcher
resource research Public Programs
The Brother/Sister Sol program empowers urban teenagers to define themselves as leaders who are committed to their community.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Susan Wilcox Jason Warwin Khary Lazarre-White
resource research Media and Technology
This article describes the Multimedia Arts Education Program (MAEP), an ongoing, intensive after school computer-mediated art technology program begun in 1996 by the Tucson Pima Arts Council (TPAC) in Tucson, Arizona. This five-semester program targets at-risk middle school youth from disadvantaged families. Students worked with professional artist/teachers, learning to do computer graphics and publishing, language arts and word processing, computer animation and video production.
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TEAM MEMBERS: J. David Betts
resource research Public Programs
A vivid portrait of a little girl, her mother, and their experience at a neighborhood agency demonstrates how stories taken from the field can illustrate the power of peer education and motivate staff toward more inspired educational after school programming.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Sara Hill
resource research Public Programs
A program that combines sports and literature can improve students’ reading, writing, and comprehension skills. What’s more, it promotes children’s personal development and selfesteem, and forges a link between sports, literature, and their daily lives.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Tom Zierk
resource research Public Programs
Children thrive individually when they feel part of a group. Thus every youth organization must intentionally create an agency culture that promotes positive values and relationships. Using social group work theory and her own experience as an agency director, the author proposes a Model for Common Humanity: nine principles that can guide the fostering of an agency milieu.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Eileen Lyons
resource research Public Programs
At a family service agency in the North Bronx, staff members have drawn a vital connection between community and literacy. The authors explain how their literacy program evolved from a basic tutoring opportunity into a curriculum using themes and information gleaned from the young participants’ immediate community surroundings.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Jonathan Shevin Chris Young
resource research Public Programs
OST programs can be part of the solution to the growing epidemic of child obesity. A first step is to understand current practices and learn about supports for—and barriers to—providing nutritious foods in afterschool programs.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Jessica Wiecha Georgia Hall Ellen Gannett Barbara Roth
resource research Media and Technology
Both scholarly literature and popular media often depict predominantly negative and one-dimensional images of boys, especially African-American boys. Predictions of these boys’ anticipated difficulties in school and adulthood are equally prevalent. This paper reports qualitative research that features case studies of nine urban boys of color, aged nine to eleven, who participated in an afterschool program where they learned to create digital multimedia texts. Drawing on an analysis of the children’s patterns of participation, their multimodal products, and their social and intellectual growth
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TEAM MEMBERS: Glynda Hull Nora Kenney Stacy Marple Ali Forsman-Schneider