Fact Sheet: Positive Youth Development
The Positive Youth Development approach suggests that helping young people
to achieve their full potential is the best way to prevent them from engaging
in risky behaviors. Organizations and communities that promote Positive
Youth Development give youth the chance to exercise leadership, build skills,
and get involved. The self-confidence, trust, and practical knowledge that
young people gain from these opportunities help them grow into healthy,
happy, self-sufficient adults.
Positive Thinking Leads to Positive Results
When community members and policymakers harness the positive energy and
initiative of youth, good things happen:
- Youth believe they can be successful instead of internalizing the negative
stereotypes about them that often appear in the media.
- Youth engage in productive activities that build job and life skills
and reinforce community-mindedness.
- Youth grow comfortable questioning and exploring their roles as citizens
in a participatory democracy.
In addition, adults who work closely with youth—and therefore see
their dedication, responsibility, and willingness to learn—tend to
view youth positively.
Positive Youth Development Takes Many Forms
Organizations and communities put Positive Youth Development into practice
by allowing young people to help make important decisions about their own
lives, the organizations that serve them, and their communities.
You can put Positive Youth Development into practice by:
- Recruiting young people to volunteer for local grassroots organizations
- Showing youth how to start their own newspapers or Web sites
- Asking high school students to co-teach classes with their teachers
- Teaching young people to conduct surveys on community and school resources
- Encouraging local businesses to sponsor job fairs and job shadowing
days
- Inviting youth to serve on the board of a local nonprofit organization
- Creating a youth board that advises State or local government on issues
young people care about such as violence prevention, transportation, and
afterschool activities
Many local programs offer young people positive opportunities. The Boys
& Girls Clubs of America, National 4-H Council, and YMCA of the USA,
for example, are national organizations that promote the Positive Youth
Development approach through their local program affiliates. Smaller organizations—such
as local runaway shelters, afterschool centers, mentoring programs, and
job training sites—promote Positive Youth Development, too.
The Evidence Is Growing
The nonpartisan National Academy of Sciences conducted a 2-year study to
find out how effective community-level programs are at helping youth. The
resulting report, Community Programs To Promote Youth Development (2002) concluded that “adolescents who spend time in communities that
are rich in developmental opportunities . . . experience less risk and show
evidence of higher rates of positive development.” The report also
recommended that each community offer a variety of activities to accommodate
the different interests and abilities of young people.
Research into Positive Youth Development’s efficacy continues at
universities around the country and at organizations such as the Search
Institute, Girl Scouts of the USA, and 4-H.
A Role for Everyone
Everyone has a role to play in helping his or her community promote Positive
Youth Development:
- Neighborhood leaders and community members can involve young people
in measuring how well the community supports youth, and then work together
to improve services.
- Policymakers can engage youth in discussions about policies that affect
them.
- Business leaders can teach young people the skills they will need for
successful employment.
- Youth service organizations can encourage youth participation in every
aspect of their work.
- Members of the media can help give young people outlets for expressing
their views.
- Treatment providers can engage adolescent treatment recipients in service
to others, for instance, as peer educators.
- Teachers and school administrators can ensure that school policies,
procedures, and teaching methods engage young people fully.
- Faith-based institutions can involve young people in community activities.
- Parents can strive to engage their children in positive activities that
nurture their talents, skills, and interests.
Contact
For more information on Positive Youth Development, visit http://ncfy.acf.hhs.gov.
Or contact the National Clearinghouse on Families & Youth, P.O.
Box 13505, Silver Spring, Maryland 20911-3505; (301) 608-8098; fax:
(301) 608-8721; e-mail: ncfy@acf.hhs.gov.
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