Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

Youth Development Programs

By: Lawrence Martin Home | Reference-and-Education


Youth development programs seek to improve the lives of children and adolescents by meeting their basic physical, developmental, and social needs and by helping them to build the competencies needed to become successful adults. Examples of youth development programs include community service, mentoring programs, and neighborhood youth centers.
It is unclear exactly how many youth development programs are operating in the United States in the early twenty-first century. In 1998 the Internal Revenue Service identified more than 5,700 nonprofit organizationsâ€almost 3 percent of all charitable agenciesâ€that focused their primary services on youth development. In addition, countless other organizations offer youth development activities within a different primary focus. Examples include youth groups within religious organizations and after-school activities offered by public elementary schools.
The purpose of this entry is to provide an overview of youth development programs. It is organized in the following manner. First, a brief history of services for children and youth is presented. Second, the current framework for youth development programs, including school-based youth development efforts, is discussed. Next, issues regarding access to youth development programs and findings from evaluations of youth development efforts are presented. Finally, several issues regarding implementation of youth development programs and future research directions are discussed.
Historical Development of Youth Development Programs
The concept of childhood as a unique and crucial stage of human development is a relatively recent idea. Until the mid-1800s, children were viewed as miniature adults who, without strict guidance from their families, would follow their natural inclination toward aggression, stubbornness, sinfulness, and idleness to their doom. Not surprisingly, the earliest programs and services for children who were poor, orphaned, delinquent, or mentally ill focused heavily on helping them avoid their natural inclination toward vice and sought to help them gain useful occupation. Apprenticeships were arranged for older children, while younger children were cared for in almshouses where their health, morals, and education would be improved with the overall goal of ensuring future self-sufficiency.
Beginning in the mid-1800s, numerous factors combined to influence a transformation in the view of children and childhood and subsequently in services for children. Writings of the English philosopher John Locke (1632â€1704) and American transcendentalists fostered the view of children as pure and good human beings who learn from experience and, as a result, are corrupted only by the influence of society. The nineteenth-century English naturalist Charles Darwin's theory of evolutionâ€specifically its premise of environmental influence on behavior and developmentâ€contributed to the growing belief that, with appropriate nurturing, children could be molded into successful adults. As a result, childhood began to be viewed as a particularly critical point in human development. Friedrich Froebel (1782â€1852), the German educator and founder of the kindergarten movement, encouraged this viewpoint and contended that children required special preparation for adulthood, as well as opportunities for recreation and play. The publication of American psychologist and educator G. Stanley Hall's seminal work Adolescence in 1904 expanded this notion to older children and served to further cement such views.
This shift led to significant changes in services for children and adolescents. Institutions specifically designed to nurture the needs of children replaced apprenticeships and almshouses. Although the earliest institutions for children date to the mid-1700s, the movement to remove children from almshouses did not gain broad support until the nineteenth century. In 1861 Ohio passed the first state statute calling for the mandatory removal of all children from county almshouses, and by 1890 about 600 institutionsâ€mostly owned and operated privately by religious and ethnic groupsâ€were serving indigent children. Institutional child care during this period tended to take an undemocratic and antifamily approach characterized by discipline, training, and rehabilitation. These institutions operated with minimal oversight and mass care, rather than individualized attention, was the norm. Support for institutional child care waned for several reasons including increased economic uncertainty; the inability to build institutions at a rate sufficient to meet the needs of a growing number of orphaned, dependent, and delinquent children; the rise of public education; and the reduction in apprenticeship and legal indenture opportunities.
Child-care institutions were quickly replaced by a movement to place needy children with families. Led by the New York Children's Aid Society and its founder, the Reverend Charles Loring Brace, this movement focused on helping delinquent and needy children from New York City's poorest classes by transplanting them to a more healthful environment. Under Brace's direction, thousands of children were transported on orphan trains from New York City slums to live with farm families in the expanding West. Although they were subsidized by the city and the state, Brace's orphan trains failed to live up to his ideals. The families with whom the children lived often took advantage of their labor and failed to provide them with even the basic necessities and education. Poor families resented having their children sent so far away, and eventually the western states complained about what they perceived to be the dumping of thousands of delinquent and needy children each year. The economic shift from an agrarian society to an industrial society reduced the need for child labor on farms and further doomed this movement. Brace's conviction that family life was best for children and youth, however, continues to influence services for children to this day.



Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
english essays

Tags: ,

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Reference-and-Education Articles Via RSS!

Recent Related Articles From Reference-and-Education

  • Personal Development Affiliate Programs: What You Need To Know When Choosing One
    By: Ben Needles | Oct 23rd 2008
    If youre searching for the right personal development affiliate programs to sink your time, money and effort into, then there are some things you should know Read

  • 3 Tips To Choosing An Affiliate Program
    By: Ben Needles | Sep 30th 2008
    There are many affiliate products out there, including a handful of personal development affiliate programs Read

  • Join A Yoga Training School And Learn The Art Of Stress-free Living
    By: Anirban | Sep 20th 2010
    Yoga is an ancient discipline of improving concentration and physical endurance. With the help of yoga, individuals can discipline their mind and body through various physical and breathing exercises. Read

  • Changing The Meaning Of Ideas
    By: dgcarticle | Sep 23rd 2009
    The list of ways that we conquer (hide) the problems of societies with language repeats itself. I am sure you have considered a few as you read. But my perspective is simply this. God gave the orphan to His Church, to love and care for. Adjusting the name does not change the command, and; although we can mislead ourselv ... Read

  • I Know You Can Do It! 7 Tips For Teaching Kids To Become Self Reliant
    By: Dr Robyn Silverman | Mar 22nd 2008
    It's developmentally appropriate for children to become more and more independent, self reliant and responsible as they age. It can be challenging for parents to know when to step back and let their children try something on their own. This article provides 7 tips to help parents instill self reliance and a sense of respons ... Read

  • Setting Limits And Establishing Boundaries: A Parenting Gift That Keeps On Giving

    My husband is often flabbergasted at the disrespectful things that come out of my five year old boy's mouth. I WILL NOT brush my teeth, hmmph!" our little boy declares with a stamp of his mini, size 12 foot, or GIVE ME another cookie!" My dear spouse's jaw drops and he says, I don't remember ever speaking to my mother th ... Read

  • Toys For Tots Program Expands Giving Boundaries
    By: lar | Dec 22nd 2007
    I am sure that you all have heard of the Toys for Tots program that the United States Marine Corps sponsors every Christmas. But, did you know that it has gone global? Read

  • Children Story Books, A Tool For Development
    By: Jacko Liver | Dec 22nd 2010
    The children story books play a major role in the mental and moral development of a child. We should encourage them in reading these books. Read

  • Web Development Process-development Life Cycle
    By: mark johnson | Nov 3rd 2006
    Web Development process can also be classified into different development life cycle steps just like traditional software development process. Read

  • Learn To Write - What Is A Twist In The Tale?
    By: Lisa Brunel | Mar 31st 2010
    There is a lot that goes into the process when you learn to write. It doesn't come naturally for everyone. Even if you do feel like you have a knack for writing children's books, there are techniques and exercises that you can do regularly that will increase your overall effectiveness. Read


Copyright © 2005-2011 eArticlesOnline, LLC - All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy