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resource research Public Programs
A study of high-quality youth arts programs, supported by the literature on sustainability, suggests strategies out-of-school time (OST) programs can use to build a solid financial foundation.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Christine Proffitt
resource research Public Programs
Field notes from a study of a family support program for African immigrants reveal some of the challenges faced by these parents and their adolescent children.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Michelle Porche
resource research Public Programs
In the juvenile justice reform movement, the principles of youth organizing can help bridge the gap between the goals of social justice and individual youth development.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Ruben Austria
resource research Public Programs
This article examines a major staffing challenge in out-of-school time programs--attracting and retaining part-time staff who can be relied upon to deliver high quality programming.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Ron Asher
resource research Public Programs
Multilingual and multimodal literacy practices in a out-of-school migrant education program support Cambodian (ethnic Khmer) youth in using diverse modes of communication, revealing the intimate connections among literacy, language, culture, and identity.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Theresa McGinnis
resource research Public Programs
After school programs are uniquely suited to encouraging the kinds of sustaining “work” that help children develop their special abilities and a sense of identity.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Lena Townsend
resource research Public Programs
African-American adolescent girls who expressed little interest in literacy activities nevertheless enthusiastically engaged in reading and writing around a topic that mattered to them—doing hair—particularly when they were allowed to determine the format of the literacy activities. The program aimed to carve out free spaces for self-directed learning.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Daneel Edwards
resource research Public Programs
The 2000 Census indicates a significant increase in foreign-born and first-generation students in public schools, at a time when multicultural communities are challenging long-held notions about civic participation in America. This study of Teen Educators Advocating for Community Health (TEACH) illustrates how an innovative afterschool program attempted to nurture social capital and a sense of belonging in immigrant youth. Drawing on Robert Putnam’s distinction between the bonding and bridging forms of social capital, the study argues that afterschool programs can help immigrant youth develop
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TEAM MEMBERS: Marc Camras
resource research Public Programs
Afterschool staff need to be able to supervise young participants so they can engage safely in a variety of activities. Afterschool programs should create a strong procedural plan to protect young people from harm and the program from liability.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Heather Olsen Chris Kowalski
resource research Public Programs
Annual trips to the state capital to advocate for afterschool funding not only allow young people to participate in the democratic process but also foster youth development by focusing on educational goals.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Susan Blank Lucy Friedman Kathleen Carlson
resource research Public Programs
This article encourages afterschool programs to promote youth identification as community science experts. It uses the case study of the GET City program to frame the discussion of encouraging identity development should be an important outcome of afterschool programming.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Angela Calabrese Barton Daniel Birmingham Takumi Sato Edna Tan Scott Calabrese Barton
resource research Public Programs
The amount of OST programming available has increased significantly in the last decade—but are enough programs available in the right places, and are children realizing the potential benefits of participation? This article reviews social and policy changes over the past few decades and the research on program availability and use, program content and duration, and unmet need for programming. It examines implications for research, advocacy, and policy.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Kathryn Hynes Felicia Sanders