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resource research Public Programs
A survey of out-of-school time administrators and staff shows that professional development can influence providers' willingness and ability to include children with special needs in their programs.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Jane Sharp Elizabeth Rodas Alan Savodnik
resource research Public Programs
This article presents research on collaboration between the New York City Department of Youth and Community Development and the New York Academy of Sciences to provide STEM learning opportunities in out-of-school time.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Meghan Groome Linda Rodriguez
resource research Public Programs
Professional development, training, workshop, technical assistance—from program to program or region to region, these can mean the same, or quite different, things. Let’s start a conversation toward consensus in the out-of-school time (OST) field on common definitions of our professional development terms.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Nancy Peter
resource research Public Programs
The example of two pilot credentials in Massachusetts, The School-Age Youth Development Credential (SAYD) and the Professional Youth Worker Credential (PYWC), can help us to understand the importance of establishing credentials and what we can expect to accomplish in doing so. This knowledge can guide the next steps in establishing a national credential for afterschool and youth workers.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Georgia Hall Ellen Gannett
resource research Public Programs
This article examines the literature on best practices in content-specific professional development and then aligns this work with the practices of a citywide afterschool chess program run by After School Activities Partnerships (ASAP) in Philadelphia. This analysis shows that implementing content-specific professional development based on best practices can lead to long-lasting and content-rich OST programming.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Benjamin Cooper
resource research Public Programs
Our study looks at how participation in a continuous quality improvement initiative produces higher-quality practice in Rhode Island’s afterschool community by fostering change in program management practices. Among other findings, we discovered that quality improvement begins with program managers, who then lead the process of change.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Elizabeth Devaney Charles Smith Kenneth Wong
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
Afterschool programs that strive to be inclusive should remember to welcome participants with disabilities. A new instrument can help afterschool programs determine how well they are doing at including kids with disabilities and assess whether those providing the services—leaders and staff—overestimate their organization’s inclusiveness as compared to those who use the services.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Fred Galloway Mary Shea
resource research Public Programs
What keeps dedicated afterschool workers on staff? Ongoing, informal professional development is one of the most powerful incentives.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Denise Huang Jamie Cho
resource research Public Programs
Practitioner research fellowships help transform out-of-school-time practitioners from consumers of others’ research to makers of knowledge based on their own experience and practices.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Sarah Hill Susan Matloff-Nieves Lena Townsend
resource research Public Programs
Social network analysis of a local afterschool ecosystem in Dallas County, Texas, reveals programs’ relative isolation from one another and their dependence on just a few funding sources. Considerable opportunity exists for programs to collaborate to build a more cohesive system of afterschool programming.
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TEAM MEMBERS: Martha Russell Marc Smith
resource research Public Programs
This checklist provides a step-by-step process for preparing, leading, and ending an after school science project. The document also includes a partner checklist for science coaches and trainers when instructing adult learners.
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TEAM MEMBERS: National Partnerships for After School Science 2