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Title: Promoting Positive Development in SchoolAged Children: Strategies for Successful Prevention


1
Promoting Positive Development in School-Aged
Children Strategies for Successful Prevention
  • Kimberly A. Schonert-Reichl, Ph.D.
  • Dept. of Educational Counselling Psychology,
  • Special Education
  • University of British Columbia
  • kimberly.schonert-reichl_at_ubc.ca
  • United Way Presentation
  • February 12, 2004

2
Overview
  • Why should we be concerned?
  • What works in prevention?
  • What are the essential ingredients for fostering
    childrens social-emotional competence?
  • Examples from recent research in Vancouver.
  • Suggestions for fostering school-aged childrens
    social, emotional, moral, and academic success
    (suggested readings and websites).

3
Why should we be concerned?
  • There is a growing concern about childrens and
    adolescents social-emotional adjustment and
    mental health
  • Approximately 1 in 5 (20) identified with mental
    health problems.
  • Boys more likely to be identified with
    externalizing problems (e.g., conduct
    disorders, aggression),
  • Girls more likely to be identified with
    internalizing problems (e.g., depression,
    anxiety)
  • 75 - 80 of children and youth do not receive
    the services they need.

4
Why should we be concerned . . .?
  • Childhood aggression is one particular type of
    problem that has been gaining increasing
    attention as a target for prevention/intervention
    efforts (Institute of Medicine, 1994).
  • Hymel et al. (2002)
  • 10 - 12 of adolescents report being victimized
    weekly
  • 8 - 10 report bullying peers
  • Pepler Craig (2001)
  • 14 bullies, 5 victims
  • Peers are present in 85 of bullying episodes on
    the playground and in class

5
Why should we be concerned . . .?
  • Recent increase in the risks that children face
    in our society
  • Social and economic changes have led to increases
    in number of children living in poverty.
  • Loss of support from traditional neighborhoods
    and extended families.
  • Reduced support and contact with positive adult
    role models.

6
What do children need?
  • Support-Children need to experience support,
    care, and love from their families, neighbors,
    and many others. They need organizations and
    institutions that provide positive, supportive
    environments.
  • Empowerment-Children need to be valued by their
    community and have opportunities to contribute to
    others. For this to occur, they must be safe and
    feel secure. 
  • Boundaries and expectations-Children need to know
    what is expected of them and whether activities
    and behaviors are "in bounds" and "out of
    bounds." 
  • Constructive use of time-Children need
    constructive, enriching opportunities for growth
    through creative activities, youth programs

7
The Importance of Fostering Social Emotional
Competence
  • Social emotional competence measures the ability
    to understand, process, manage, and express
    social and emotional aspects of our lives
    (Cohen, 2001).
  • Social and emotional learning refers to the
    process and methods used to promote social and
    emotional competence.

8
What is Social and Emotional Learning?
(www.casel.org)
  • Self-Awareness awareness of feelings and our
    own abilities sense of self-confidence.
  • Social Awareness ability to take others
    perspectives appreciating and interacting with
    diverse groups.
  • Self-Management being able to regulate ones
    own emotions conscientious perseverance.
  • Relationship Skills Establishing and
    maintaining healthy relationships negotiating
    conflict seeking help when needed.
  • Responsible Decision-Making Assessing risks and
    making good decisions respecting others taking
    personal responsibility for ones decisions.

9
The Importance of Fostering Social Emotional
Competence
  • Social emotional literacy reduces violence and
    promotes prosocial behaviours (Schonert-Reichl,
    Smith, Zaidman-Zait, 2002 Weissberg
    Greenberg, 1998).
  • Prosocial behaviours exhibited by students in the
    classroom are better predictors of academic
    achievement than are standardized test scores
    (Wentzel, 1993).
  • Academic achievement in Grade 8 can be better
    predicted from knowing childrens grade 3 social
    emotional competence than from knowing childrens
    grade 3 academic achievement (Caprara et al.,
    2000).

10
Context for Change
  • Prevention programs that work use a framework
    that involves families, peers, schools, and
    communities as partners to target multiple
    outcomes.
  • What is needed is a set of coordinated,
    collaborative strategies and programs in each
    community (Dryfoos, 1997).
  • It is importance to recognize the multiple
    spheres of influence on childrens development.

11
Urie Brofenbrenners Contextual PerspectiveA
childs unique development cannot be viewed
without seeing the child in social and cultural
context
  • Microsystem everyday environment (e.g., homes,
    friends, caregivers)
  • Mesosystem connections between aspects of the
    microsystem (e.g., child to parent)
  • Exosystem encompasses social institutions
    (e.g., government, community, schools)
  • Macrosystem larger cultural influences (e.g.,
    society in general, religious systems, political
    thought)
  • Chronosystem underlies all other systems (e.g.,
    historical events and changes)

12
(No Transcript)
13
What Works in Prevention?Weissberg, R. P.,
Kumpfer, K. L., Seligman, M. E. P. (2003).
Prevention that works for children and youth, An
introduction. American Psychologist, 58, 425-432.
  • Uses a research-based risk and protective factor
    framework that involves families, peers, schools,
    and communities as partners to target multiple
    outcomes.
  • Is long term, age-specific, and culturally
    appropriate.
  • Fosters development of individuals who are
    healthy and fully engaged through teaching them
    to apply social-emotional skills and ethical
    values to daily life.

14
What Works in Prevention?(contd)
  • Aims to establish policies, institutional
    practices, and environmental supports that
    nurture optimal development.
  • Selects, trains, and supports interpersonally
    skilled staff to implement programming
    effectively.
  • Incorporates and adapts evidence-based
    programming to meet local community needs through
    strategic planning, ongoing evaluation, and
    continuous improvement.

15
What are the Ingredients for Promoting Positive
Development in School-Aged Children?
  • A Developmental Approach
  • A Strengths-Based approach
  • The Creation of a Caring Context
  • Attention to Implementation and Evaluation

16
Ingredient 1 A Developmental Approach
  • Recognize the factors that influence students
    social emotional development and behaviour. A
    knowledge of developmental theory is essential
  • Stages of cognitive/social development
  • Mechanisms/processes that promote development
  • The importance of scaffolding knowing where
    children are and where they can be
  • Child centered
  • Consider the students point of view
  • Activities and lessons calibrated to childrens
    developmental level

17
Developmental Tasks of Middle Childhood (Masten
Coatsworth, 1998)
  • School adjustment (attendance, appropriate
    conduct)
  • Academic achievement (e.g., learning to read, do
    arithmetic)
  • Getting along with peers (peer acceptance, making
    friends)
  • Rule-governed conduct (following rules of society
    for moral behavior and prosocial conduct)

18
Ingredient Two The need for a Strengths-Based
Approach
  • Recent years have witnessed a shift from a focus
    on risk to identifying factors that protect
    individuals and foster positive development.
  • Resiliency -- successful adaptation despite
    adversity, or overcoming the odds.
  • Resiliency Factors
  • Individual characteristics
  • Intelligence
  • Personality (e.g., temperament, empathy, hope)
  • Family and Peers (e.g., social support, cohesion)
  • Schools (e.g., school belonging, significant
    adult)

19
Shifting from a risk to a resiliency focus
  • Recent years have witnessed a shift from a focus
    on risk to identifying factors that protect
    individuals and foster positive development.
  • There is a regrettable tendency to focus
    gloomily on the ills of mankind and on all
    mankind and on all that can and does go wrong . .
    . The potential for prevention surely lies in
    increasing our knowledge and understanding of the
    reason why some children are not damaged by
    deprivation . . . (Rutter, 1979, p. 49).

20
Fostering Competence
  • It is critical to the future of a society that
    its children become competent adults and
    productive citizens. Thus, society and parents
    are a stake in the development of competence and
    in understanding the processes that facilitate it
    and undermine it (Masten Coatsworth, 1998, p.
    205)

21
Defining Risk Conceptual Issues
  • There is an increasing popularity of the at
    risk concept
  • The term is used in psychology, education, social
    work, counselling, and medicine
  • Not yet a universally agreed upon definition for
    the at risk term-- lack of clarity of the
    concept
  • A term applied too often and too widely looses
    all meaning. (Tidwell Corona Garrett, 1994)

22
Characteristics of the Resilient Child
  • is good natured has affectionate disposition
    (resilient temperament)
  • has nondistressing habits during infancy
  • positive social orientation and activity level
  • accurate processing of interpersonal cues
  • good means-end problem solving skills
  • an ability to evaluate alternative actions from
    instrumental and affective perspectives
  • the capacity to enact behaviors that accomplish
    desired outcomes
  • a sense of self-efficacy has sense of control
    over fate
  • communicates effectively
  • has sense of personal worthiness high
    self-esteem
  • is effective in work, play, and love
  • asks for help is assertive
  • is above average in social intelligence
  • has ability to have close relationships
  • has healthy expectations and needs
  • uses talents to personal advantage
  • delays gratification
  • has internal locus of control
  • is flexible
  • has desire to improve
  • has interpersonal sensitivity
  • has good problem solving and decision making
    abilities
  • has future orientation (plans for the future)
  • has trust and hope
  • exhibits and manages a range of emotions
  • has a sense of humor
  • has relationship with caring adult
  • has informal support network with friends and
    family
  • engages in activities and hobbies

23
Protective Factors
  • Individual Assets
  • Positive peer group
  • Problem solving skills
  • Communication skills
  • Positive conflict resolution skills
  • Positive sense of self
  • Takes responsibility for own behaviours
  • Empathy and sensitivity towards others

24
Protective Factors
  • Family Assets
  • Positive adult role models
  • Positive communication within the family
  • Parental involvement in childs life
  • Clear rules and consequences within the family
  • Time with family

25
Protective Factors
  • School Assets
  • Connectedness to school
  • Supportive school environment
  • Participation in after school activities
  • Effective involvement in the school
  • Relationship with one significant adult
  • Community Assets
  • Connectedness to community
  • Positive and clear community norms and values
  • Effective prevention policies

26
Examples from research
  • Evaluating the effects of the Roots of Empathy
    program on childrens social and emotional
    competence
  • School Activity Participation and Childrens
    Social and Academic Success The Hastings
    Community School Study

27
The Roots of Empathy An example of a
school-based social-emotional competence
promotion program
  • ROE is a universal primary preventive
    classroom-based social emotional competence
    promotion program (Kindergarten grade 8)
    developed by Mary Gordon.
  • The cornerstone of the program is a class visits
    by an infant, his/her parent and the instructor.
    It is during these visits that children learn
    about the babys growth and development via
    interactions and observations with the baby.
  • The program was piloted in Toronto in 2
    classrooms in 1996.
  • In the current school year, 20,000 children in
    classrooms across Canada are receiving the
    program. The program is being piloted in Japan.

28
What are the Goals and Theoretical Framework of
ROE?
  • Overall, the ROE program is designed
  • To promote the development of childrens
    emotional and social understanding,
  • To foster childrens prosocial qualities (concern
    for others, helpfulness, and cooperation),
  • To reduce childrens aggression.
  • Theoretical Framework
  • View of empathy as multidimensional (Feshbach,
    1979)
  • Identification of emotions,
  • Understanding emotions,
  • Emotional regulation.
  • Ecological Focus -- creation of a positive social
    milieu that is, a caring community in the
    classroom.

29
Theoretical Model of Social-Emotional Competence
Development
30
Why focus on empathy?
  • Empathy defined here as an individuals
    emotional responsiveness to the emotional
    experiences of another is increasingly being
    recognized as an important dimension of social
    competence.
  • Research findings indicate that empathy is
    crucial in determining childrens social
    functioning in both academic and interpersonal
    domains.
  • Empathy has been identified by some as the most
    important of all personality characteristics
    because of the critical role it plays in
  • helping individuals desist aggressive behaviors
    and,
  • fostering prosocial behaviors (e.g., sharing,
    helping).

31
Description of 2000-2001 Evaluation Methodology
  • Participants
  • 132 primary grade children drawn from 10
    classrooms participated
  • (ROE, n 74 Comparison, n 58).
  • 61 ESL (majority Chinese, 21 languages)
  • Comparison classrooms were matched on grade,
    gender, and race/ethnic composition.
  • Constructs Measured
  • Emotion Knowledge
  • Social Understanding (e.g., perspective-taking)
  • Social Behaviors (teacher-ratings)
  • Procedure
  • Children were individually interviewed at
    pre-test and post-test
  • Interviews were transcribed and coded
  • Teachers completed a modified version of the
    Child Behavior Scale (CBS Ladd Profilet, 1996)
    a measure assessing several dimensions of
    aggressive, withdrawn, and prosocial behaviors.

32
Example Evaluating the Effectiveness of the
Roots of Empathy Program
  • Findings from 2000-2001 Evaluation
  • ROE children, relative to comparison children,
    demonstrated significant improvements in the
    following areas
  • Increased emotion knowledge
  • Increased social understanding
  • Increased prosocial behaviors with peers
  • Decreased aggression with peers
  • Decreased proactive aggression (e.g., bullying)

33
Finding of 2000-2001 Evaluation- Social
Behaviours Proactive Aggression
34
Of those children who evidenced some form of
proactive aggression (bullying) at pre-test ROE
children 88 decreased Comparison children
50 increased
35
2002-2003 Rural/Urban Evaluation Caring
Classroom
36
2002-2003 Rural/Urban Evaluation Peer
AcceptanceStudents who you would like to be in
school activities.
37
Fostering Resiliency in School The Hastings
Community School Study
  • Involvement in School-Related Activities
  • Previous research has linked involvement in
    school-related activities to
  • More positive school adjustment (higher academic
    achievement)
  • Lower drop-out
  • Lower delinquency
  • Better mental health (e.g., lower depression)
  • These relations have not yet been examined among
    students in elementary schools.

38
Fostering Resiliency The Role of Schools
  • Non-Related Significant Adult
  • Previous research has linked significant adults
    to at risk childrens resilience
  • There is very little research that has examined
    this relation in the school context, especially
    elementary school.
  • Almost no research has asked children to describe
    the characteristics of the adults whom children
    identify as significant.

39
Research Questions
  • Participation in school-related activities
  • Do children who participate in school-related
    activities differ from those children who do not
    on dimensions of school and social/emotional
    adjustment?
  • The role of the significant non-related adult
  • Do children identify a significant non-related
    adult?
  • If so, do children who identify at least 1
    significant adult differ on social and school
    competence than those children who do not
    identify anyone?
  • What is the relation of academic dimensions to
    social and emotional dimensions (such as social
    responsibility, empathy, etc.)?

40
Hastings StudyMethod
  • Participants
  • 236 students from the 4th-6th grades.
  • 52 female,
  • 48 first language English, 31 Chinese, and 21
    other,
  • 98 of children participated in the study

41
Measures
  • Participation in School Related Activities
  • Activity checklist to indicate all activities
    registered in during the 2002-2003 school year
  • Activity consumer satisfaction scale (four point
    Likert-type scale)
  • School Self-Concept (SDQ Marsh, 1998)
  • General Self-Concept (SDQ Marsh, 1998)
  • Academic Self-Efficacy (Academic Goals
    Questionnaire, Wentzel, 1998)
  • Teachers ratings of
  • Academic Achievement
  • Social Competence

42
Measures (contd)
  • Sense of Classroom as a Community Scale
    (Battistich et al., 1997)
  • Prosocial Classroom (Wentzel, 1994)
  • Social Responsibility (Wentzel, 1994)
  • Perspective-Taking (Davis, 1983)
  • Empathy (Davis, 1983)
  • Self-Report of Prosocial Behaviours (sharing,
    helping, cooperating Bandura et al., 1996)

43
Important Adults from Hastings Community School
Questionnaire
  • Make a list of the adults from Hastings Community
    School who are important in your life.
  • Persons FirstName OR INITIALS.
  • Is this person a man (M) or a woman (W)?
  • What is this persons job at your school?
  • Does this person make you feel good about
    yourself?
  • Can you trust this person?
  • Can you talk to this person about your problems?
  • Do you like spending time with this person?
  • Now choose one of the people from above.
  • Person _______________________
  • List all the ways in which this person is
    important in your life.

44
Results School Participation
  • Findings revealed that those students who
    reported participating in school activities, were
    higher than nonparticipating students on
  • General self-concept (self-esteem)
  • School self-concept
  • Prosocial Behaviors (sharing, helping, etc.)
  • Perspective-Taking skills
  • Teacher-rated social competence

45
School Participation and Self Concept
46
School Participation and Social Competence
47
Results Significant Adults and Competence
  • Adults listed as significant
  • Teachers 57
  • Childrens descriptions of what makes an adult
    significant at Hastings, some examples
  • She taught me how to read
  • Nice
  • She helps me with my work
  • Cause he gives me a warm feeling
  • Helps me with my feelings

48
Significant Adults and Social Adjustment
49
Significant Adults and Social Adjustment
50
Relations of Academic Dimensions to Social Side
of Learning
  • Academic Achievement was related to higher levels
    of students
  • Self-Concept
  • Social Responsibility
  • Prosocial Behaviour (sharing, helping,
    cooperating)
  • Academic Motivation
  • Teacher-rated Social Competence and Behavioral
    Adjustment

51
Conclusions
  • It is critical to the future of our society that
    we identify the factors that assist children to
    become competent, caring adults and productive
    citizens.
  • We all share a stake in the development of
    childrens emotional and social competence and in
    identifying the processes that facilitate or
    undermine it.
  • These data support the need for coordinated
    efforts that attend to the promotion of
    childrens positive academic and social-emotional
    development in community schools.

52
Conclusions
  • Thank You!!
  • Questions

53
What Works in Prevention? Principles of Effective
Prevention Programs (Nation et al., 2003)
  • Comprehensive
  • Multiple interventions
  • Multiple settings
  • Varied Teaching Methods
  • Interactive instruction
  • Active, hands-on experience
  • Sufficient Dosage
  • Enough of an intervention to produce desired
    effects
  • Follow-up

54
What Works in Prevention?
  • Theory Driven
  • Theoretical justification
  • Supported by empirical research
  • Positive Relationships
  • Provide exposure to adults and peers in a way
    that promotes strong relationships and support
    positive outcomes
  • Appropriately Timed
  • Initiate early enough to have a positive impact
  • Sensitive to developmental needs of participants

55
What Works in Prevention?
  • Socioculturally Relevant
  • Tailored to the community and cultural norms of
    participants
  • Include the target group in program planning and
    implementation
  • Outcome Evaluation
  • Programs have clear goals and objectives
  • Effort to systematically document their results
    relevant to goals
  • Well-trained Staff
  • Program staff support the program and provided
    with sufficient training to implement the program

56
SEL Books and Readings
  • Cohen, J. (Ed.) (2001). Caring Classrooms/Intellig
    ent Schools The Social Emotional Eduaction of
    Young Children (Social and Emotional Learning,
    2). New York, NY Teacher's College Press.
  • Cohen, J. (Ed.). Educating minds and hearts
    Social emotional learning and the passage into
    adolescence. New York, NY Teacher's College
    Press, Alexandria, VA ASCD, co-publisher.
  • Denham, Susanne A. (1998). Emotional Development
    in Young Children. The Guilford Press.
  • Durlak, J. A. (1995). School-based prevention
    programs for children and adolescents. Thousand
    Oaks, CA Sage Publications.
  • Elias, M. J., Zins, J. E., Weissberg, R. P.,
    Frey, K. S., Greenberg, M. T., Haynes, N. M.,
    Kessler, R., Schwab-Stone, M. E., Shriver, T.
    P. (1997). Promoting social and emotional
    learning Guidelines for educators. Alexandria,
    VA Association for Supervision and Curriculum
    Development.
  • Ellison, L. (2000). The Personal Intelligences
    Promoting Social and Emotional Learning Elias,
    M.J., Arnold, H., Steiger C. (Eds.) (2002).
    EQIQ How to build smart, nonviolent,
    emotionally intelligent schools. Corwin Press
    Thousand Oaks, CA.
  • Goleman, D. (1997). Emotional Intelligence Why
    it can matter more than IQ. New York, NY Bantam
    Books.
  • Haynes, N., Ben-Avie, Ensign, J. (Eds.) (2003).
    How social and emotional development add up
    Getting results in math and science education.
    New York Teachers College Press.
  • Kessler, R., (2000). The Soul of Education
    Helping Students Find Connection, Compassion, and
    Character at School. Alexandria, VA Association
    for Supervision Curriculum Development.
  • Knoll, M., (2001). Administrator's Guide to
    Student Achievement Higher Test Scores. New
    Jersey Prentice Hall Trade.
  • Novick, B., Kress, J.S, Elias, M.J. (2002).
    Building Learning Communities with Character How
    to Integrate Academic, Social, and Emotional
    Learning. Alexandria, VA Association for
    Supervision and Curriculum Development.
  • Pasi, R.J. Elias, M. (2001). Higher
    Expectations Promoting Social Emotional Learning
    and Academic Achievement in Your School (Social
    Emotional Learning, 3). Patrikakou, E. N.,
    Weissberg, R. P., Manning, J., Walberg, H. J.,
    Redding, S. (Eds.) (In press). School-family
    partnerships Promoting the social, emotional,
    and academic growth of children. New York
    Teachers College Press.

57
SEL Books and Readings (Contd)
  • Patti, J., Tobin, J. (2003). Smart school
    leaders Leading with emotional intelligence.
    Iowa Kendall Hunt.
  • Pianta, R. C. (1999). Enhancing relationships
    between children and teachers. Washington, DC
    American Psychological Association.
  • Pollack, W. (1998). Real boys. New York
    Henry Holt and Company.
  • Salovey, P., Sluyter, D. J. (Eds.). (1997).
    Emotional development and emotional intelligence
    Educational implications. New York Basic Books.
  • Scales, P. C. Leffert, N. (1999). Developmental
    assets A synthesis of the scientific research on
    adolescent development. Minneapolis, MN Search
    Institute.
  • Shelton, C.M. Stern, R. (2004). Understanding
    emotions in the classroom Differentiating
    teaching strategies for optimal learning
  • Selman, R. L. (2003). The promotion of social
    awareness Powerful lessons from the partnership
    of developmental theory and classroom practice.
    New York Russell Sage Foundation.
  • Shure, M. B., Digeronimo, T. F. (Contributor),
    Sheldon, A. (Ed.).(1996). Raising a thinking
    child Help your young child to resolve everyday
    conflicts and get along with others The 'I Can
    Problem Solve' Program. Pocket Books.
  • Shure, M. B., Digeronimo, T. F. (Contributor).
    (2000). Raising a thinking child workbook
    Teaching young children how to resolve everyday
    conflicts and get along with others. Research
    Press.
  • Shure, M. B. Israeloff, R. (2000). Raising a
    thinking preteen The 'I can problem solve'
    program for 8- to 12- year-olds. Henry Holt and
    Company, Inc.
  • Sternberg, R. J. (1997). Successful intelligence
    How practical and creative intelligence determine
    success in life. New York Plume.
  • Wood, C. (1999). Time to teach, Time to learn
    Changing the pace of school. Greenfield, MA
    Northeast Foundation for Children.
  • Zins, J. E., Weissberg, R. P., Wang, M. C.,
    Walberg, H. J. (Eds.) (2004). Building academic
    success through social and emotional learning
    What does the research say? New York Teachers
    College Press. (forthcoming, April, 2004)

58
A Few Useful Websites
  • http//www.goodcharacter.com/ (some good teaching
    guides)
  • http//www.esrnational.org/ Educators for Social
    Responsibility
  • http//www.uicedu/Inucci/MoralEd/ Studies in
    Moral Development and Education
  • This provides a very in-depth look at moral
    development. There are links to the latest
    practices and activities in the area moral
    development. It highlights featured articles on
    issues of moral development and books of
    interest. You can also visit this site to see
    some of the classroom practices that are
    associated with moral development or join the
    mailing list. It's all here!
  • http//www.eiconsortium.org/ Consortium for
    Emotional Intelligence in Organizations
  • http//www.prevention.psu.edu/ (prevention
    programs and research)
  • http//www.colorado.edu/cspv/blueprints/Default.ht
    m (Blueprints for Violence Prevention - Model
    programs)
  • http//www.devstu.org/ Developmental Studies
    Center
  • This center is dedicated to children's
    intellectual, ethical and social development.
    This site is a great resource for teachers.

59
Websites (contd)
  • Centre for Academic and Social and Emotional
    Learning (CASEL)
  • http//www.casel.org
  • CASEL is the best place in North American to
    obtain educator friendly materials and readings
    for promoting the social and emotional
    development of their students. You can download
    several articles and resources. Particularly
    useful is the newly published Safe and Sound
    Guide An Educational Leaders Guide for
    Evidence-Based Practice. In this guide, the
    authors provide a comprehensive review and
    evaluation of 85 SEL programs designed to promote
    students social and emotional learning. In the
    appendix for this guide, the authors provide
    descriptions of each program along with contact
    information for obtaining the program.
  • Development Studies Center (Child Development
    Project)
  • http//www.devstu.org/
  • This center is dedicated to children's
    intellectual, ethical and social development.
    This site is a great resource for teachers. It
    outlines the centers school-based program as well
    as after school programs. Parents should check it
    out too. The center's website gives parents some
    direction in terms of their involvement in their
    children's development. It's a very comprehensive
    site.
  • Studies in Moral Development and Education
  • http//www.uicedu/Inucci/MoralEd/
  • This website provides a very in-depth look at
    moral development. There are links to the latest
    practices and activities in the area moral
    development. It highlights featured articles on
    issues of moral development and books of
    interest. You can also visit this site to see
    some of the classroom practices that are
    associated with moral development or join the
    mailing list. It's all here!
  • Roots of Empathy Primary Prevention Program
  • http//www.rootsofempathy.org/
  • What is Roots of Empathy?
  • It's a rich, vital, and highly rewarding
    classroom parenting Roots of Empathy that
    teaches human development and nurtures the growth
    of empathy. A baby and parent(s) visit a
    classroom once a month for a 10-month period. A
    Roots of Empathy instructor works with students
    before, during, and after each visit. Students'
    learn about parenting, about themselves, about
    how others feel, and teachers almost always learn
    something new about their students. All the
    learnings springboard from visits with the baby.
  • This website provides detailed information about
    a classroom-based prevention program designed to
    foster empathy and prevent antisocial/aggressive
    in children in grades Kindergarten to grade 8.

60
Websites (contd)
  • Children, Youth, and Families, Education and
    Research Network
  • www.cyfernet.org
  • ResilienceNet
  • www.resilnet.uiuc.edu
  • Resilience in Action
  • www.resiliency.com
  • Search Institute
  • www.search-institute.org
  • Taking Stock Growth through Resilience The
    post-traumatic growth interactive exercise
  • www.helping.apa.org/resilience

61
Websites (contd)
  • Youthnetwork Links and Ideas Advocacy and
    Prevention
  • www.youthwork.com/advocacyprevresil.html
  • Developmental Studies Center (Caring School
    Community Project)
  • www.devstu.org
  • Collaborative for Academic and Social and
    Emotional Learning
  • www.casel.org
  • Child and Adolescent Services Research Centre
  • www..casrc.org
  • Centre for Youth and Society (Univ. of Victoria)
  • www.youth.society.uvic.ca
  • Pan-Canadian Education Research Agenda
  • Children and Youth At Risk Symposium (2000)
  • www.cmec.ca

62
Coalition for Community Schools
  • http//www.communityschools.org/index.html
  • (From the description on the web)
  • The Coalition for Community Schools works toward
    improving education and helping students learn
    and grow while supporting and strengthening their
    families and communities. Community schools bring
    together many partners to offer a range of
    supports and opportunities to children, youth,
    families and communities -- before, during and
    after school, seven days a week.  

63
Strategies for Success Strengthening Learning in
Out-of-School Time. Strategies for Success
  • The result of a year-long research project by
    Bostons After-School for All Partnership, a 24
    million funding partnership launched in
    2001. This Partnership effort, led by Jennifer
    Davis, President of Massachusetts 2020 and Dr.
    Wilson of the Nellie Mae Education Foundation,
    commissioned seven research reports by respected
    institutions to develop a plan to improve
    learning in afterschool programs in Boston. The
    reports highlight the important contribution that
    afterschool programming can have on childrens
    academic achievement.

64
Comment on Critical Hours report.(part of
Boston After-School for all Partnerships)
  • Our data tell us that children in after-school
    programs have made real progress in improving
    their learning and academics, said Wilson. At a
    time of scarce resources we must continue to
    invest in those programs that we know are making
    a difference for our children. Clearly
    after-school programming is near the top of that
    list.
  • Dr. Miller noted, "Much of the current policy
    debate in Washington and on Beacon Hill misses
    the mark. There is a consensus in the research
    community that high-quality after-school
    programs--especially those that promote active
    learning and have consistent student
    participation--do increase student engagement.
    Increased engagement leads to positive,
    measurable academic outcomes."

65
Afterschool Education A New Ally for Education
Reform by Gil G. Noam(excerpt from)
  • There is also growing evidence that good
    afterschool programming makes a difference in
    kids' lives. Studies in child development and
    education suggest that attendance at afterschool
    is associated with better grades, peer relations,
    emotional adjustment, and conflict resolution
    skills. Children who attend programs also spend
    more time on learning opportunities and academic
    and enrichment activities than their peers.
    Combine this evidence with the statistics we know
    all too well-that unsupervised time after school
    is associated with involvement in violence,
    substance abuse, and other risk-taking
    behaviors-and the necessity for high-quality
    afterschool programs becomes even clearer.

66
Effective School Community Partner Websites
  • The Search Institute
  • http//www.search-institute.org/
  • (From the description on the web)
  • Search Institute is an independent, nonprofit,
    nonsectarian organization whose mission is to
    advance the well-being of adolescents and
    children by generating knowledge and promoting
    its application. Search Institute conducts
    research and evaluation, develops publications
    and practical tools, and provides training and
    technical assistance. The institute collaborates
    with others to promote long-term organizational,
    and cultural change that supports the healthy
    development of all children and adolescents.

67
National Institute of Out of School Time (NIOST)
  • http//www.niost.org/index.html
  •  
  • (From the description on the web)
  • For over 20 years, the National Institute on
    Out-of-School Time, at the Center for Research on
    Women at Wellesley College, has successfully
    brought national attention to the importance of
    childrens out-of-school time, influenced policy,
    increased standards and professional recognition,
    and spearheaded community action aimed at
    improving the availability, quality and viability
    of programs serving children and youth. NIOSTs
    varied initiatives have moved the field forward
    using three paths
  •         Research, Evaluation and Consultation
  •         Policy Development and Public Awareness
  •         Training and Curriculum Development
  •  

68
UCLA School Mental Health Project
  • http//smhp.psych.ucla.edu/
  • (From the description on the web)
  • It is not a new insight that physical and mental
    health concerns must be addressed if schools are
    to function satisfactorily and students are to
    succeed at school. It has long been acknowledged
    that a variety of psychosocial and health
    problems affect learning and performance in
    profound ways. Such problems are exacerbated as
    youngsters internalize the debilitating effects
    of performing poorly at school and are punished
    for the misbehavior that is a common correlate of
    school failure. More recently, the efforts of
    some advocates for school-linked services has
    merged with forces working to enhance initiatives
    for community schools, youth development, and the
    preparation of healthy and productive citizens
    and workers. The merger has expanded interest in
    social-emotional learning and protective factors
    as avenues to increase students' assets and
    resiliency and reduce risk factors.
  • More recently, the efforts of some advocates for
    school-linked services has merged with forces
    working to enhance initiatives for community
    schools, youth development, and the preparation
    of healthy and productive citizens and workers.
    The merger has expanded interest in
    social-emotional learning and protective factors
    as avenues to increase students' assets and
    resiliency and reduce risk factors. 

69
Center on School, Family, and Community
Partnerships
  • http//scov.csos.jhu.edu/p2000/center.htm
  • (From the description on the web)
  • The nations schools must improve education for
    all children, but schools cannot do this alone.
    More will be accomplished if schools, families,
    and communities work together to promote
    successful students. The mission of this Center
    is to conduct and disseminate research,
    development, and policy analyses that produce new
    and useful knowledge and practices that help
    families, educators, and members of communities
    work together to improve schools, strengthen
    families, and enhance student learning and
    development.
  • Research is needed to understand all children
    and all families, not just those who are
    economically and educationally advantaged or
    already connected to school and community
    resources. The Centers projects aim to increase
    an understanding of practices of partnership that
    help all children succeed in elementary, middle,
    and high schools in rural, suburban, and urban
    areas.

70
Harvard Graduate School of Education - The
Program in Afterschool Education and Research
(PAER)
  • www.gse.harvard.edu/afterschool/about/index.php
  • (From the description on the web)
  • Located at the Harvard Graduate School of
    Education (HGSE), is dedicated to making
    meaningful theoretical and practical
    contributions to the field of youth development,
    with a particular focus on afterschool time. The
    program was founded in 1999 by Dr. Gil Noam in
    response to the growing recognition that
    high-quality afterschool programs hold the
    promise of contributing to school reform,
    building resiliency, and preventing high-risk
    behavior in youth. PAER takes a developmental
    approach to the study of new models of effective
    afterschool programming, and incorporates
    educational, health, public policy, and
    psychological perspectives. PAER has established
    dynamic collaborations with other Harvard
    University departments, projects, and programs,
    and provided technical assistance to local
    communities and city-wide initiatives.
  • "Afterschool Education deepens the understanding
    of anyone-policy makers, capacity-building
    organizations, program administrators, partnering
    educators, afterschool program leaders-who is
    invested in the effective use of afterschool
    resources to support young people's growth and
    progress."
  • Sam Piha, LCSW, Director for Community School
    Partnerships

71
Afterschool Alliance
  • http//www.afterschoolalliance.org/home.html
  • (From the description on the web)
  • The Afterschool Alliance is a nonprofit
    organization dedicated to raising awareness of
    the importance of afterschool programs and
    advocating for quality, affordable programs for
    all children. It is supported by a group of
    public, private and nonprofit organizations that
    share the Alliance's vision of ensuring that all
    children have access to afterschool programs by
    2010. The Alliance was formed on the belief
    that afterschool programs are critical to
    children and families today, and that the need
    for programs is not adequately addressed. As many
    as 15 million children have no place to go after
    the school bell rings. These children are more
    likely to be victims of crime or to participate
    in risky behaviors. Meanwhile, children in
    afterschool programs have improved grades,
    behavior and school attendance. They have
    important opportunities to learn and grow.
  •  
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