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HFRP

Study of Predictors of Participation in Out-of-School Time Activities

Project Description

Harvard Family Research Project (HFRP) has received a 2-year grant, beginning in November 2004, from the William T. Grant Foundation to support a quantitative study of the individual and contextual predictors of participation in out-of-school time (OST) activities.

Why Learning About Participation Is Important
For several years, HFRP has been helping practitioners, researchers, and policymakers grapple with the complex issues of providing high quality nonschool-hour services to young people. One key issue that has emerged for all stakeholders is youth participation in OST programs. Practitioners want to know how to attract and sustain participation to maximize the potential benefits to those participating. OST funders also are invested in understanding how to measure participation in more meaningful ways. With scarce resources, policymakers want to know how much participation is enough to improve youth outcomes.

These issues are especially salient for youth who are at risk for social and academic problems. Although these youth are often targeted by community programs and are the ones who can reap the largest benefits from participating in OST activities (e.g., Mahoney, 2000; Roeser & Peck, 2003), they are the least likely to participate (Furstenberg, Cook, Eccles & Elder, 1998). There is evidence to suggest that once youth are engaged in OST activities of sufficient quality for an ample amount of time, they experience measurable positive effects. Yet, there is little information, especially for youth at risk, about the factors that contribute to getting youth “in the door” and keeping them engaged—a critical missing link in our understanding of participation and its association to outcomes.

Goals of the Study
Our previous work on participation, including papers on attracting and sustaining youth participation and measuring attendance, coupled with our regular contact with key people and organizations that cut across OST stakeholder groups, positions us well to tackle issues of participation (Lauver, Little & Weiss, 2004; Simpkins, Little & Weiss, 2004). Therefore, in alignment with W. T. Grant's commitment to youth development through investments in high quality research, we are conducting a quantitative research project coupled with a strong strategic communications plan aimed at examining and communicating information about the predictors of children's participation in OST activities.

Specifically, we are examining the following questions:

  1. What are the child, family, school, and neighborhood predictors of participation? In particular, are disadvantaged youth less likely to have access to or participate in out-of-school time activities?
  2. How do child, family, school, and neighborhood characteristics interact to predict participation in out-of-school activities? (I.e., what are the mediating and moderating pathways within and between these contexts?)

The Data
To effectively address our questions, we are conducting secondary data analyses on two national datasets, namely the Panel Study of Income Dynamics - Child Development Supplement (PSID-CDS) and the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NELS88). Each study contains rich contextual indicators and OST activity measures that allow us to examine multiple predictors and dimensions of participation (e.g., intensity, duration). These datasets also help to paint a detailed picture of participation for youth and contexts that are commonly underrepresented in the literature; the PSID-CDS population is particularly diverse due to an over sampling of poor and minority children, and the NELS88 allows for demanding tests of school and neighborhood contexts as children are nested within schools and neighborhoods. Complementary analyses completed across these datasets will take advantage of the unique characteristics of each dataset and provide broader and more rigorous answers to our questions than if we used data from a single local study. This investigation compliments and extends current W. T. Grant funded work, such as projects by Eccles and Brooks-Gunn and Roth, by providing in-depth analyses on multiple predictors of youth's current and sustained participation in two large, nationally representative samples.

Practice and Policy Implications
This study will inform policy and practice by providing critical information concerning how characteristics of children, families, schools, and neighborhoods interact to predict participation in OST activities. From a practitioner standpoint, understanding these complex interactions will enable programs to better assess community needs and develop program activities that fill important gaps in service delivery at the community level. It will also help program staff identify recruitment strategies and barriers to participation, especially for at-risk youth. Because of the interactive communications plan, practitioners will be engaged throughout the study, ensuring that the information generated from this study will be useful and relevant to their practice.

From a policy standpoint, this study will address a growing demand from the policy community for rigorous research (Bouffard, 2003) and allow policymakers to better target interventions for specific populations. A recent review of four large after school evaluations clearly demonstrates that attendance in after school programs is sporadic and short-lived (Kane, 2004). However, there is some evidence to suggest that participation is boosted at programs located in neighborhoods offering few alternatives for young people after school (Granger & Kane, 2004). Understanding child, family, school, and neighborhood characteristics that help shape participation, particularly sustained participation, will help decision makers better allocate resources for nonschool-hour alternatives for youth. Further, it will help identify barriers to participation that could be addressed through examination of current social and welfare policies that inhibit some youth from reaping the benefits of participating in OST activities.

Sharing the Findings
HFRP's team of highly skilled researchers, graduate students, consultants, and staff from a variety of disciplines and experiences, including the field of practice, will implement this grant. In addition to our expertise in the area of OST participation, our previous communications work conducted as part of an earlier W. T. Grant Foundation grant positions us well to ensure translation and dissemination of our findings to key practitioner and policy audiences. In line with the W. T. Grant Foundation's mission, we have a commitment to and capacity for strategic communications that views information flow as two-way between research and practice, and embraces ongoing communication among researchers, practitioners, policymakers, advocates, and others invested in improving programs and policies for young people. Specific communications tactics related to this grant are (a) disseminating and marketing electronically, using our well-established Web presence; (b) targeting key audiences with publications in a variety of formats; (c) expanding outreach through convening; and (d) improving our strategy through outreach to practitioners and key researchers.

new! See the latest papers published from this study (updated July 2006)

References

Bouffard, S. (2003). Doing what works: Scientifically based research in education. The Evaluation Exchange, 9(1), 15,17.

Furstenberg, F. F., Jr., Cook, T. D., Eccles, J., & Elder, G. H. (1998). Managing to make it: Urban families and adolescent success. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Granger, R. C., & Kane, T. (2004, February 18). Improving the quality of after-school programs. Education Week, 23(23), 52, 76.

Kane, T. J. (2004). The impact of after-school programs: Interpreting the results of four recent evaluations [Acrobat file]. New York: W. T. Grant Foundation.

Lauver, S., Little, P. M. D., & Weiss, H. B. (2004). Moving beyond the barriers: Attracting and sustaining youth participation in out-of-school time programs. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Family Research Project.

Mahoney, J. L. (2000). School extracurricular activity participation as a moderator in the development of antisocial patterns. Child Development, 71(2), 502–516.

Roeser, R. W., & Peck, S. C. (2003). Patterns and pathways of educational achievement across adolescence: A holistic-developmental perspective. New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 101, 39–62.

Simpkins Chaput, S., Little, P. M. D., & Weiss, H. B. (2004). Understanding and measuring attendance in out-of-school time programs. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Family Research Project.

Project Team

Heather Weiss, Principal Investigator and HFRP Director
Sandi Simpkins, Co-Investigator (email: sandra.simpkins@asu.edu)
Eric Dearing, Co-Investigator (email: deariner@uwyo.edu)
Holly Kreider, Project Manager
Priscilla Little, Research Associate
Suzanne Bouffard, Research Associate
Chris Wimer, Research Assistant (email: wimer@fas.harvard.edu)

To be kept updated on the progress of this project, please subscribe to our OST updates email. For questions about the project, please contact Holly Kreider, Project Manager.


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