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Afterschool Research and Policy Implications

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Title: Afterschool Research and Policy Implications


1
Afterschool Research and Policy Implications
  • Presentation to Wisconsin State Prevention
    ConferenceJune 11, 2009Ramada Hotel, Stevens
    Point, WI

2
Defining Afterschool
  • The Who, What, Where and Why?

3
Who?
  • 6.5 million children and youth in K-12
  • Nearly 1 million in 21st Century Community
    Learning Center programs
  • In about 10,000 school and community based centers

4
What is Afterschool?
  • Safe, structured programs that provide youth in
    K-12 a range of supervised activities
    intentionally designed to encourage learning and
    development outside the school day
  • Can also be called
  • School age child care
  • Out of school time
  • Expanded learning opportunities

5
Where is Afterschool?
  • Occurs is variety of settings
  • Schools,
  • Museums
  • Libraries
  • Parks
  • Faith based organizations
  • Youth service agencies,
  • Health agencies
  • And many other community based organizations.

6
When?
  • Before and after school
  • Weekends
  • School holidays
  • Summer
  • During the school year
  • usually run 2-3 hours/day
  • 4-5 days/week

7
Why do Afterschool?
  • Educators, researchers, advocates and policy
    makers alike are rethinking how to best educate
    our nations young people and prepare them to be
    productive citizens in the 21st Century
  • Most agree this includes sustained participation
    in well-structured and well-implemented after
    school programs and activities

8
Put a Face on It Activity Part 1
9
What does research say?
  • Does participation in after school programs make
    a difference, and if so,
  • What conditions appear to be necessary to achieve
    positive results?

10
A seminal research study
  • After School Programs in the 21st Century, Their
    Potential and What it Takes to Achieve It, Number
    10, Feb. 2008, by Pricilla Little, Christopher
    Wimmer and Heather B. Weiss
  • This Harvard Family Research Project research
    brief summarized 10 years of research

11
A Resounding YES!
  • A decade of research and evaluation studies,
    confirms that children and youth who participate
    in after school programs can reap a host of
    positive outcomes in a number of related areas
    such as
  • Academic
  • Social/emotional
  • Prevention
  • Health Wellness

12
ACADEMIC OUTCOMES
  • Afterschool programs can improve academic
    achievement outcomes such as
  • Better attitudes toward school higher
    educational aspirations
  • Higher school attendance rates less tardiness
  • Less disciplinary action (e.g., suspension)
  • Lower dropout rates
  • Better performance in school, as measured by
    achievement test scores and grades
  • Greater on-time promotion
  • Improved homework completion
  • Engagement in learning

13
Key Study SupportingAcademic Outcomes
  • Longitudinal Findings from the Study of Promising
    After-School Programs by
  • Deborah Lowe Vandell, University of California,
    Irvine
  • Elizabeth R. Reisner, Policy Studies Associates,
    Inc.
  • Kim M. Pierce, University of California, Irvine
  • 2008

14
Conclusions on Improved Academic Outcomes
  • Elementary middle school students who regularly
    attended high quality afterschool programs
    demonstrated significant gains of 12 to 20
    percentiles in standardized math test scores.
  • Elementary middle school students who regularly
    participated in high-quality afterschool programs
    had significant gains in self-reported work
    habits.
  • Classroom teachers of the elementary students
    also reported gains in work habits task
    persistence.
  • Vandell, D,. Reisner, E. Pierce, K. (2007)

15
Conclusions on Improved Social and Behavioral
Outcomes
  • Elementary program participants exhibited gains
    in social skills with peers pro-social behavior
    reductions in aggression
  • Both elementary and middle school program
    participants demonstrated reductions in
    misconduct (e.g., skipping school, getting into
    fights).
  • Middle school program participants reported
    reduced use of drugs alcohol
  • Vandell,D,. Reisener, E. Pierce, K. (2007)

16
Study Insights
  • After school programs can improve academic
    achievement however, dozens of studies
    underscore the powerful impact of supporting a
    range of positive learning outcomes, by providing
    youth opportunities to learn and practice new
    skills through hands-on, experiential learning in
    project-based afterschool programs.

17
Common Threads
  • Its not just that the programs intentionally
    tried to improve academic performance and
    therefore offered academic support, but they
    combined it with other enrichment activities to
    achieve positive academic outcomes.

18
SOCIAL/EMOTIONAL OUTCOMES
  • Afterschool programs can improve youth social and
    developmental outcomes. Outcomes include
  • Decreased behavioral problems
  • Improved social and communication skills and/or
    relationships with others (peers, parents,
    teachers)
  • Increased self-con?dence, self-esteem, and
    self-ef?cacy
  • Lower levels of depression and anxiety
  • Development of initiative
  • Improved feelings and attitudes toward self and
    school

19
Key Study Supporting Social/Emotional Development
  • The Impact of After-School Programs That Promote
    Personal and Social Skills
  • Joseph Durlak, Loyola University, Chicago,
  • Roger Weissberg, University of Illinois, Chicago
  • Collaborative for Academic, Social and Emotional
    Learning (CASEL), 2007

20
Findings
  • Youth who participate in after school programs
    improve significantly in three major areas
  • Feelings and attitudes
  • Indicators of behavioral adjustment
  • School performance
  • Effective programs use evidence based skill
    training approaches

21
Evidence Based Training Approaches (SAFE)
  • Sequential (set of activities focused on
    outcomes)
  • Active (forms of hands on learning)
  • Focus (on personal or social skills
  • Explicit targeting of specific personal or social
    skills

22
PREVENTION OUTCOMES
  • Participation in after school programs can have a
    positive impact on a range of prevention
    outcomes.
  • Avoidance of drug and alcohol use
  • Decreases in delinquency and violent behavior
  • Increased knowledge of safe sex
  • Avoidance of sexual activity
  • Reduction in juvenile crime

23
Key Study Supporting Prevention Outcome
  • Longitudinal study of effect of participation in
    LAs BEST programs on juvenile crime
  • Tracked students from 1994 2003
  • Comparing LAs BEST participants to two control
    groups

24
Results of Study
  • Participation in LAs BEST was signi?cantly
    related to lower incidences of juvenile crime.
  • Researchers estimate this translates into average
    savings to society of 2.50 for every dollar
    invested in the program.
  • While participation rates were a key factor in
    crime reduction this is powerful evidence of
    potential long-term effects of and bene?ts to
    society from after school programs!

25
HEALTH AND WELLNESS OUTCOMES
  • Participation in after school programs can
    contribute to healthy lifestyles and increased
    knowledge of nutrition and exercise. Outcomes
    associated with participation in after school
    programs include
  • Better food choices
  • Increased physical activity
  • Increased knowledge of nutrition and health
    practices
  • Reduction in BMI
  • Improved blood pressure
  • Improved body image

26
Key Study Supporting Health and Wellness Outcome
  • Summertime and Weight Gain Study (Paul von
    Hippel)
  • Children gain body mass index (BMI) nearly twice
    as fast during the summer as during the school
    year. (2007)
  • Black and Hispanic children and children who are
    already overweight experience healthier BMI gain
    during the school year (2007)
  • Only 1 in 5 children in 2006 who received free or
    reduced meals during school did so in the summer
    (2007)

27
Put a Face on Your Partners Activity
                                                        
                                                               

                                        
                                    
                                         
                                    
28
Three Critical Factors to Achieve Successful
Outcomes
  • Access to and sustained participation in programs
  • Quality programming, particularly
  • Appropriate supervision and structure
  • Intentional programming
  • Strong partnerships with families, other
    community organizations and schools

29
Supporting Student Outcomes Through Expanded
Learning Opportunities
  • NEW report by Harvard Family Research,
    http//www.hfrp.org/

30
Principles of Sustainable Partnerships
  • Shared vision with focus on supporting academics
  • Blended staffing models that enable crossover
    between school, afterschool and summer staff
  • School/Afterschool/summer partnership at multiple
    levels
  • Regular and reciprocal collection and sharing of
    info on student progress
  • Intentional and explicit contrast between school
    and afterschool

31
Using Research for Policy Change
  • Expand definition of student success
  • Use knowledge about how students learn best
  • Integrate various approached to acquiring and
    reinforcing knowledge
  • Collaborate across local, state and national
    sectors
  • Provide new leadership and professional
    development opportunities
  • A Report from the Time, learning and Afterschool
    Task Force, 2007

32
Join Afterschool Alliance

  • Host a Lights on Afterschool Event on October 22,
    2009
  • Free resources at afterschoolalliance.org

33
What is ?
34
  • Vision

All Wisconsin school age children and youth have
the opportunity to attend a high quality
afterschool program.
35
Mission
  • Support schools and community partners in
    delivering high quality afterschool programs to
    diverse school age children and youth that
  • Increase academic achievement
  • Enhance youth development
  • Encourage family involvement.

36
  • Partnership Goal
  • Create a sustainable structure of statewide,
    regional, local and school-community partnerships
    focused on supporting high quality afterschool
    programs and influencing policy development.
  • Policy Goal
  • Support the development and growth of statewide
    policies to secure resources needed to sustain
    new and existing afterschool programs.
  • Program Quality Goal
  • Support statewide systems to ensure programs are
    of high quality.

37
Supporting Student Success (S3) Grant
  • Goal
  • Establish sustainable cross agency funding to
    maximize existing revenue
  • Adoption of statewide quality regulations and
    program standards for extended learning
    opportunities

38
Connect to UW-Extension 4-H Youth Development
  • Visit county staff http//www.uwex.edu/ces/cty/
  • Wisconsin 4-H Afterschool website
    http//www.uwex.edu/ces/4h/afterschool/

39
Making Your Case Activity
  • Refer to Outcomes handout for ideas
  • Draft a 2 min. pitch to a key stakeholder, funder
    or legislator
  • Introduce self say who you are representing
  • Say why you are here in one sentence
  • Make your case in 2 minutes
  • Ask for something specific
  • Leave handout send thank you

40
Whats Next?Converge for a common cause with

41
Adapt and Share This Training
  • PowerPoint handouts posted on my webpage at
  • http//www.uwex.edu/ces/4h/afterschool/partnership
    s/links.cfm

42
Keep ConnectingFor its all about the Kids!
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