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Building Healthy Communities for Positive Youth Development [electronic resource] / by Michael J. Nakkula, Karen C. Foster, Marc Mannes, Shenita Bolstrom.

By: Nakkula, Michael J [author.].
Contributor(s): Foster, Karen C [author.] | Mannes, Marc [author.] | Bolstrom, Shenita [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: The Search Institute Series on Developmentally Attentive Community and Society: 7Publisher: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2010Edition: First.Description: XIV, 189 p. 2 illus. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781441957443.Subject(s): Philosophy (General) | Social work | Developmental psychology | Psychology | Child and School Psychology | Social Work | Education (general)DDC classification: 155.4 | 155.424 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Transformation, Affirmation, and Blended Models -- Strategic Care, Sector by Sector: Traverse Bay Area’s GivEm40 24.7 -- The Forgotten Neighborhoods: Moorhead, Minnesota’s Healthy Community Initiative -- Pursuing “The Tipping Point”: Portland, Oregon’s Take the Time Initiative -- Community Sustainability: Orlando’s Healthy Community Initiative -- We Are Not a Program! St. Louis Park, Minnesota’s Children First Initiative -- Partnering with Prevention: The Lawton/Fort Sill, Oklahoma, Community Coalition -- “Leaderful” Communities: The McPherson, Kansas, Tri-County Asset-Building Initiative -- The Next New Frontier: Nevada’s Healthy Communities Coalition of Lyon and Storey Counties -- Project Postscript: Resisting the Template.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The Healthy Communities • Healthy Youth (HC • HY) project has provided grassroots support for the creation of robust, welcoming environments not only for children and adolescents at risk but for all youth. Building Healthy Communities for Positive Youth Development explains the Developmental Assets framework in depth and demonstrates how eight local initiatives across the country have adapted and implemented it to fit the unique cultures and resources of their neighborhoods and the needs and strengths of their young people. Stakeholders collaborating in the process include parents, educators, politicians, service providers, law enforcement, volunteers, and—as active participants instead of merely recipients of services—youth themselves. In this visionary book, the authors provide readers with a flexible, living blueprint for promoting the well-being of children and teenagers. Areas of coverage include: Core themes of the eight HC • HY initiatives. The use of an asset-based common language among participants. Building common ground among the various sectors involved in the initiatives. The varied roles of young people within the initiatives. Research design and methodology; data collection and interpretation. Funding issues and challenges. The mission outlined in Building Healthy Communities for Positive Youth Development fits the interests of a wide range of professionals, including developmental psychologists; child, youth, and family service professionals; clinical child and school psychologists; and allied education and mental health practitioners working with children and adolescents.
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Transformation, Affirmation, and Blended Models -- Strategic Care, Sector by Sector: Traverse Bay Area’s GivEm40 24.7 -- The Forgotten Neighborhoods: Moorhead, Minnesota’s Healthy Community Initiative -- Pursuing “The Tipping Point”: Portland, Oregon’s Take the Time Initiative -- Community Sustainability: Orlando’s Healthy Community Initiative -- We Are Not a Program! St. Louis Park, Minnesota’s Children First Initiative -- Partnering with Prevention: The Lawton/Fort Sill, Oklahoma, Community Coalition -- “Leaderful” Communities: The McPherson, Kansas, Tri-County Asset-Building Initiative -- The Next New Frontier: Nevada’s Healthy Communities Coalition of Lyon and Storey Counties -- Project Postscript: Resisting the Template.

The Healthy Communities • Healthy Youth (HC • HY) project has provided grassroots support for the creation of robust, welcoming environments not only for children and adolescents at risk but for all youth. Building Healthy Communities for Positive Youth Development explains the Developmental Assets framework in depth and demonstrates how eight local initiatives across the country have adapted and implemented it to fit the unique cultures and resources of their neighborhoods and the needs and strengths of their young people. Stakeholders collaborating in the process include parents, educators, politicians, service providers, law enforcement, volunteers, and—as active participants instead of merely recipients of services—youth themselves. In this visionary book, the authors provide readers with a flexible, living blueprint for promoting the well-being of children and teenagers. Areas of coverage include: Core themes of the eight HC • HY initiatives. The use of an asset-based common language among participants. Building common ground among the various sectors involved in the initiatives. The varied roles of young people within the initiatives. Research design and methodology; data collection and interpretation. Funding issues and challenges. The mission outlined in Building Healthy Communities for Positive Youth Development fits the interests of a wide range of professionals, including developmental psychologists; child, youth, and family service professionals; clinical child and school psychologists; and allied education and mental health practitioners working with children and adolescents.

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