Workforce Support for Urban After‐School Programs: Turning Obstacles into Opportunities

Highlights Resource and workforce challenges impede adoption of evidence‐based practice in after‐school programs. Academic–community partnerships inform recommendations that align with individual program goals. We describe a three‐tiered approach to workforce support with online, workshop, and on‐si...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of community psychology 2019-06, Vol.63 (3-4), p.430-443
Hauptverfasser: Frazier, Stacy L., Chou, Tommy, Ouellette, Rachel R., Helseth, Sarah A., Kashem, Erin R., Cromer, Kelly D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Highlights Resource and workforce challenges impede adoption of evidence‐based practice in after‐school programs. Academic–community partnerships inform recommendations that align with individual program goals. We describe a three‐tiered approach to workforce support with online, workshop, and on‐site components. Content prioritizes mental health kernels: emotion regulation, communication, and problem‐solving. Support leverages teachable moments inherent to recreation and harnesses staff talent and expertise. Organized after‐school programs can mitigate risk and build resilience for youth in urban communities. Benefits rely on high‐quality developmental experiences characterized by a supportive environment, structured youth–adult interactions, and opportunities for reflective engagement. Programs in historically disenfranchised communities are underfunded; staff are transient, underpaid, and undertrained; and youth exhibit significant mental health problems which staff are variably equipped to address. Historically, after‐school research has focused on behavior management and social‐emotional learning, relying on traditional evidence‐based interventions designed for and tested in schools. However, after‐school workforce and resource limitations interfere with adoption of empirically supported strategies and youth health promotion. We have engaged in practice‐based research with urban after‐school programs in economically vulnerable communities for nearly two decades, toward building a resource‐efficient, empirically informed multitiered model of workforce support. In this paper, we offer first‐person accounts of four academic–community partnerships to illustrate common challenges, variability across programs, and recommendations that prioritize core skills underlying risk and resilience, align with individual program goals, and leverage without overextending natural routines and resources. Reframing obstacles as opportunities has revealed the application of mental health kernels to the after‐school program workforce support and inspired lessons regarding sustainability of partnerships and practice.
ISSN:0091-0562
1573-2770
DOI:10.1002/ajcp.12328