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 (1) Understand why activity quality is important for children’s development  (2) Differentiate between structural and process quality parameters and.

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Presentation on theme: " (1) Understand why activity quality is important for children’s development  (2) Differentiate between structural and process quality parameters and."— Presentation transcript:

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2  (1) Understand why activity quality is important for children’s development  (2) Differentiate between structural and process quality parameters and give examples of each  (3) Be able to identify, describe, and evaluate several features of process quality

3  Developmental Consequences  All the activity-related outcomes we have discussed depend on quality…  …school achievement, attendance, school dropout, college, substance use, antisocial behaviors, criminal offending, peer acceptance, depression, anxiety, self-esteem, aspirations for the future, child obesity.

4  Poor Quality Programs  Do not confer physical, cognitive, or social benefits  May contribute to the development of problem behaviors  Quality is often mediocre

5  Evaluation  It is essential to assess quality for purposes of program assessment and improvement

6 Think-Pair-Share You are designing an after-school program to serve children ages 6-12. What components or features would you want to include to make the program high quality so that it promotes positive developmental outcomes?

7 Come to the front and write some of your quality features or components on the black board.

8 (1) STRUCTURAL or institutional features. Elements that establish the setting and context for positive relationships and high-quality activities.

9 (2) PROCESS and content features. Practices that participating children experience directly.

10  Education and training of staff  Planning time and assistance  Group size and child-to-staff ratios  Space and materials  Partnerships with schools, parents, community

11  Positive relations with staff and peers  Mix of academic and non-academic skill-building activities  Opportunities for cognitive growth  Physical activities and recreation  Encouragement of student engagement  Opportunities for autonomy and choice  Mastery orientation

12  Negative/hostile staff-child interactions  aggression, depression, less learning  This is process quality  Structural quality  process quality  Higher child:staff ratios predicts of drop in emotional support from staff.  Staff who were less educated were more negative. Sources: Rosenthal & Vandell; Grossman et al.

13  Study of 1000+ children at YMCAs, Girls Inc., Boys & Girls Clubs  Many programs fail to meet the participants’ needs – physical, psychological, and social.  36% felt less safe at the program than elsewhere  39% felt never or almost never valued  35% felt there were no adults at the program to whom they could turn  40% reported never or almost never having input in program activities Source: Gambone and Arbreton

14  Appropriate Structure  Supportive Relationships  Opportunities for Belonging  Physical and Psychological Safety  Positive Social Norms  Support for Efficacy and Mattering  Opportunity for Skill Building  Integration of Family, School, & Community Source: National Research Council & Institute of Medicine (2002)

15  1. Afterschool Program Assessment System (National Institute on Out - of - School Time, 2008 )  2. Out - of - School Time Observation (Policy Studies Associates, 2005 )  3. Program Observation Tool (National Afterschool Association)  4. Program Quality Observation (Vandell & Pierce, 1998 )  5. Promising Practices Rating Scale (Vandell, Reisner, Brown, Dadisman, Pierce, Lee, & Pechman, 2005 )  6. Quality Assurance System (Foundations Inc., 2007 )  7. Program Quality Self - Assessment (New York State Afterschool Network, 2005 )  8. School - Age Care Environment Rating Scale (Harms, Jacobs, & White, 1996 )  9. Youth Program Quality Assessment (Smith & Hohmann, 2005 )

16 The Study of Promising After-School Programs Promising Practices Rating System Observation Manual – Revised 2012

17 1 = negative exemplars are evident – where staff are intrusive, bored or distant, yell at or embarrass students 2 = neutral – no clear message either way 3 = some indicators of supportive relationships with adults 4 = evidence of many positive indicators: E.g., students are comfortable initiating interactions with staff, staff use positive behavior management, staff are engaged with children, are positive role models

18 1 = students do not work well together; may harass, intimidate or threaten each other 2 = students are not negative with each other or do not hassle each other, but have few positive interactions 3 = some indicators of supportive peer relations 4 = evidence of many positive indicators and no evidence of negative indicators: negotiate situations effectively, relaxed interactions, work well together, share

19 1 = most students are not engaged appropriately (off task), may appear bored 2 = students are participating in activities but do not appear to be concentrating or affectively involved 3 = students are focused on activities with some evidence of affect involvement or sustained concentration 4 = students are concentrating on activities, focused, interacting pleasantly when appropriate, and are affectively involved in the activity

20 1 = little or no opportunity for cognitive growth 2 = opportunities occur primarily in the context of homework; use of other activities for cognitive growth is limited; staff ask few or no questions requiring elaboration 3 = some opportunities within some activities 4 = variety of opportunities and staff are highly effective in facilitating students’ learning experiences; many opportunities for planning, synthesis, problem solving

21 1 = staff are unprepared; poor materials; long transitions; environment is unsafe 2 = a few indicators of appropriate structure 3 = some indicators of appropriate structure 4 = staff support each other; activities run smoothly; staff are well prepared; students have a clear understanding of rules; transitions are smooth

22 1 = level of staff control is appropriate to the activity; students are free to make choices 2 = level of staff control is appropriate to the activity; students may have some opportunities for choice, but not many; most activities are staff-directed 3 = staff are somewhat controlling 4 = staff are highly controlling; activities are staff-directed, students do not have opportunities for choice

23 1= no evidence of disorder or chaos 2 = students are engaged in productive level of talk; may be some brief instances of disruptive noise or talking; staff control techniques are effective 3 = some evidence of chaos 4 = students are out of control throughout observation; youth are not redirected; staff control techniques are ineffective

24 1 = no evidence of skill building or mastery orientation 2 = a few activities focus on skill building or mastery, although not in an optimal way; staff may demonstrate some concepts or skills; activities may offer challenge to some, but not all, students 3 = some activities encourage skill building or mastery 4 = many activities encourage skill building or mastery; staff explain and show techniques, give directions, etc.; encourage students to try new activities, help students go beyond their current abilities, make progress toward a goal

25  After observing the following after-school program activity, rate each of the 8 practices from 1-4  Include a justification for your answer  After you rate all the categories, score the overall quality of the activity  1 = Low quality activity  2 = Moderate quality activity  3 = High quality activity

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27  Supportive Relations with Adults  Supportive Relations with Peers  Level of Engagement  Opportunities for Cognitive Growth  Appropriate Structure  Over-Control  Chaos  Master Orientation  Overall Quality

28 PA USES THE KEYSTONE STARS RATING TO ASSESS QUALITY https://www.pakeys.org/pages/get.aspx?page =Programs_STARS


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