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After-School Centers and Youth Development

After-School Centers and Youth Development

After-School Centers and Youth Development

Case Studies of Success and Failure
Barton J. Hirsch, Northwestern University, Illinois
Nancy L. Deutsch, University of Virginia
David L. DuBois, University of Illinois, Chicago
November 2011
Paperback
9780521138512

    This book examines after-school programs in light of their explosive growth in recent years. In the rush to mount programs, there is a danger of promoting weak ones of little value and failing to implement strong ones adequately. But what is quality and how can it be achieved? This book presents findings from an intensive study of three after-school centers that differed dramatically in quality. Drawing from 233 site visits, the authors examine how – and why – young people thrive in good programs and suffer in weak ones. The book features engaging, in-depth case studies of each of the three centers and of six youths, two from each center. Written in a highly accessible style for academics, youth workers, after-school program leaders and policy makers, the study breaks new ground in highlighting the importance of factors such as collective mentoring, synergies among different programs and activities, and organizational culture and practices.

    • Written as a series of case studies, and style of writing makes for both entertaining as well as informative reading
    • By focusing on how youth and staff change – or resist change – over the course of a year, the book gives a real sense of why after-school programs succeed or fail for young people
    • Includes in-depth case studies of urban youth from at-risk environments and comprehensive after-school centers

    Awards

    Winner of the 2012 Social Policy Award for Best Authored Book, Society for Research on Adolescence

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    Product details

    November 2011
    Hardback
    9780521191197
    366 pages
    235 × 158 × 23 mm
    0.6kg
    1 b/w illus. 8 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Introduction:
    • 1. The quality of after-school centers
    • Part II. Midwest Center:
    • 2. Pockets of excellence
    • 3. Pocahontas joins the tribe
    • 4. Bill: the pros and cons of being one of the guys
    • 5. Putting it all together: Midwest Center
    • Part III. North River Center:
    • 6. A study of organizational dysfunction
    • 7. Undercutting Tweetie: the trials and tribulations of a youth leader
    • 8. Beyonce: a good friend is hard to find (and keep)
    • 9. Putting it all together: North River and Midwest Centers
    • Part IV. West River Center:
    • 10. The jewel in the crown
    • 11. Midnight: a teen father stays the course
    • 12. Tommiana: a contest between closeness and competition
    • 13. Putting it all together: what have we learned?
    • Part V. Conclusion:
    • 14. Recommendations for improving practice.
      Authors
    • Barton J. Hirsch , Northwestern University, Illinois

      Barton J. Hirsch is Professor of Human Development and Social Policy at Northwestern University. An internationally recognized authority on after-school programs and positive youth development, his earlier book, A Place to Call Home: After-School Programs for Urban Youth, won the Social Policy Award for Best Authored Book from the Society for Research on Adolescence.

    • Nancy L. Deutsch , University of Virginia

      Nancy L. Deutsch is Associate Professor of Educational Leadership and Foundations at the University of Virginia's Curry School of Education and Associate Director for Methodology at Youth-NEX, University of Virginia's Center for Effective Youth Development. A scholar of the socio-ecological contexts of development, she is the author of Pride in the Projects: Teens Building Identities in Urban Contexts.

    • David L. DuBois , University of Illinois, Chicago

      David L. DuBois is Professor in the Division of Community Health Sciences within the School of Public Health at the University of Illinois, Chicago. His research focuses on youth mentoring relationships and programs for positive youth development. He is the co-editor of the Handbook of Youth Mentoring, which received the Social Policy Award for Best Edited Book from the Society for Research on Adolescence.