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Three programs increased college credential receipt and one program had earnings impacts at the six-year follow-up.

Describes practices from across the human services field that can inspire novel approaches to engaging families during program improvement, especially in Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and child support programs.

The purpose of this Final Annual Report is to summarize the HPOG 2.0 Program participants’ activities, outcomes, and characteristics.

This brief highlights key findings from the Final Annual Report of the Health Profession Opportunity Grants (HPOG) Program, 2015-2021, the last in a series of six annual reports for the HPOG 2.0 Program.

This report describes in detail how researchers, policymakers, and program administrators can recognize opportunities for experiments and carry them out. Specifically, the report focuses on opportunistic experiments, defined as randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that study the effects of initiatives, program changes, or policy actions that agencies or programs plan or intend to implement — as opposed to studying an intervention or policy action that is developed...

This brief from the Next Steps for Rigorous Research on Two-Generation Approaches (NS2G) project describes the components of a two-generation logic model and the process for developing one.

This brief provides guidance for employment service providers and other human services agency staff who wish to implement evidence-based programs but find little information about the core components of those programs.

This brief describes insights and lessons learned by the HPOG team while creating and operating PAGES and provides federal agencies and other organizations with recommendations for implementing data systems that support federally funded time-limited grants, demonstration projects, and evaluations similar to HPOG 2.0.

Evidence on the services and combinations of services that improve labor market outcomes.

This report documents the experiences of five programs that integrate employment services into treatment and recovery programs for people with substance use disorder (SUD).