Schools Should Collaborate With After-School Programs

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Youth thrive and achieve in programs that foster caring child/adult relationships. These programs allow youth to form bonds with adults they grow to trust and staff who encourage them to succeed. When staff have long-term relationships with after-school program participants, they are able to identify changes in the child’s behavior that signal a need for intervention. A safe and secure environment that supports a child’s social and emotional development could also have a significant impact on improving a child’s academic performance. After-school programs need diverse offerings to provide the maximum number of “hooks” to draw youth. More classroom-style instruction of the same type that children get in their day-school program is not always better and needs to be filled with creative and engaging curriculum delivered by experienced, qualified, and caring staff. Several overarching themes emerged: 1) The demand for services: There is an enormous demand for out-of-school-time programs, especially for middle school students who are particularly at risk without structured out-of school time opportunities. 2) Out-of-school-time programs are the new neighborhoods: Given demographic and residential housing patterns, out-of-school-time programs have become the new “neighborhoods” and as such, are indispensable aspects of healthy communities.


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