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resource research Public Programs
This case study reveals how one community-based youth development organization in the northeastern United States advocated for social and educational equity for the low-income families it served by challenging the local school district’s practice of referring low-income children of color to special education in disproportionate numbers. Because this community-based organization (CBO) is typical of many such youth-serving organizations, the case study shows how the assets CBOs bring to their communities can help them negotiate with schools to achieve greater social and educational equity for
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TEAM MEMBERS: Sara Hill
resource research Public Programs
This article provides findings from the TERC-based program Math off the Shelf (MotS). The first phase involved working with library-based informal educators to create interdisciplinary mathematics resources, and the second phase made the resources available to a wider group of library educators.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Marlene Kliman Nuria Jaumot-Pascual Valerie Martin
resource research Public Programs
By emphasizing work-based learning, youth programs can not only meet their youth development goals but also prepare young people for success in the knowledge economy of the 21st century.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Graham Cochran Theresa Ferrari
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
Community technology centers (CTCs) help bridge the digital divide for immigrant youth in disadvantaged neighborhoods. A study of six CTCs in California shows that these centers also promote positive youth development for young people who are challenged to straddle two cultures.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Rebecca London Manuel Pastor Rachel Rosner
resource research Public Programs
By designing accountability systems that fully embrace the notion of afterschool programs as learning organizations and by using research from organizational development, education, and youth development to create effective learning environments, funders and sponsors can help programs to improve quality—and therefore, to succeed in their goal of achieving better outcomes for young people.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Wendy Surr
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 Media and Technology
A unique afterschool class in making comic strips and comic books, taught by a professional comic artist, encourages both literacy development and identity development in adolescent participants.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Sarita Khurana
resource research Public Programs
Situating community-based afterschool programs on school grounds has its risks, but there can be significant rewards as well.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Joseph Polman
resource research Public Programs
Dance classes provide a model for afterschool and in-school education where multiple, “embodied” modes of teaching and learning enhance development and where risk-taking is rewarded rather than punished.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Mira-Lisa Katz
resource research Public Programs
Pairing age-appropriate novels with thematic units on the civil rights movement and the presidential election allows one afterschool practitioner to bring democracy to life for inner-city middle school students.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Mary Cipollone
resource research Public Programs
This article describes the "In Addition" afterschool mathematics program and the pressures it faced due to standardized testing and homework. In addition aims to go beyond worksheets and drills to engage student's curiosity and help show them that mathematics is relevant to their lives outside the classroom.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Judy McVarish Patricia Birkmeier