Skip to main content

Community Repository Search Results

Current Search

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.
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Mary Cipollone
resource research Public Programs
Adult facilitators in afterschool programs can work with LGBTQ youth to construct a safe space in which the youth can validate their identities in the process of doing literacy work.
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Mollie Blackburn
resource research Public Programs
This study uses an innovative data source--the Youth Data Archive--to follow elementary and middle school students from a single school district over four academic years to discern any links between their afterschool program participation and English language development. Students attending the program had greater rates of gain in English development, but they did not necessarily achieve proficiency gains or redesignation as "fluent English proficient" sooner than non-participating students. These results point to the need for increased examination of the link between in-school and out-of
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Rebecca London Oded Gurantz Jon Norman
resource research Media and Technology
Over the past three years, hundreds of community-based afterschool comic book clubs have been launched in cities across the United States. These clubs have drawn in thousands of underserved youths in grades 1–12. In these clubs, children plan, write, sketch, design, and produce original comic books and then publish and distribute their works for other children in the community to use as learning and motivational tools. This synthetic and analytic research project explores the dynamics, outcomes, and impacts of afterschool comic book clubs.
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Michael Bitz
resource research Public Programs
This article from Afterschool Matters explores the challenge of engaging boys in writing. Loeper examines the difference between "engagement" and "flow", providing generalizable lessons for fostering engagement in out of school time activities.
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Rachel Loeper
resource research Public Programs
While much of the current concern over the literacy development of low- and moderate income children focuses on schools (and, to a lesser degree, on parents), many observers are arguing for a role for other institutions. In particular, funders are turning to afterschool programs to address this critical developmental task. This paper explores the roles afterschool programs can and do play in the literacy development of low-income children, drawing on surveys and observations of afterschool programs in Chicago, New York, and Seattle.
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Robert Halpern
resource research Public Programs
A personal essay by a former public school teacher in the Teach for America program highlights the differences between school and afterschool education.
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Lily Rabinoff-Goldman
resource research Public Programs
A school-day teacher discovers how collaboration with her afterschool counterpart benefits their students.
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Annmarie Schamper
resource research Informal/Formal Connections
The article discusses an effective physical science center, which can be incorporated on the reading instructions of teachers, the inclined plane center, that helps enhance science teaching. It mentions that to create an inclined plane center, one must collect various objects that roll, slide and wobble and wooden cove molding for the tracks. The author thinks that it is not necessary to understand everything about force and motion, what is important is offering students with opportunities for concrete experiences.
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Beth Van Meeteren Lawrence Escalada
resource research Public Programs
The article examines how school library programs are uniquely suited to initiate innovative thinking on how to leverage resources such as science fiction to help young people see the value of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) in their daily lives. The authors report on the Sci-Dentity project launched in January 2012 which involves the collaboration between researchers and librarians at the University of Maryland in designing ways to incorporate sci-fi to STEM.
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Mega Subramaniam Amanda Waugh June Ahn Allison Druin
resource research Public Programs
America's adult populace has failed to keep pace with the rapid inundation of science-centric knowledge affecting nearly every facet of personal, familial, and communal life. With three out of eveiy four American adults considered scientifically illiterate, adult civic science literacy (CSL) has reached alarmingly low levels. The purpose of this research is to determine if the CSL of adults can be elevated through a renewed citizen science paradigm (RCSP)-incorporating nonformal outdoor adult education and structured experiential learning-in which volunteers conduct scientific research in an
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: David Cronin Jonathan Messemer
resource research Public Programs
There is little evidence that the prevailing strategies of science education have an impact on the use and interpretation of science in daily life. Most science educators and science education researchers nonetheless believe that science education is intrinsically useful for students who do not go on to scientific or technical careers. This essay focuses on the 'usefulness' aspect of science literacy, which I contend has largely been reduced to a rhetorical claim. A truly useful version of science literacy must be connected to the real uses of science in daily life-what is sometimes called
DATE:
TEAM MEMBERS: Noah Feinstein