This paper
reviews youth outcomes following exposure to natural disaster, with a focus on three relatively understudied outcomes: externalizing behavior problems, physical health, and posttraumatic growth.
Not exact matches
To help ensure the best possible
outcomes for Westchester's
youth, Astorino and the Westchester Children's Association created a public - private task force to
review the RFP process.
The workshop includes a brief
review of the research on LGBTQ +
youth health and social
outcomes, including risks and buffers, appropriate responses to scenarios that professionals may encounter, resources, and referral.
Leveraging Public Dollars to Support Community School
Outcomes: An example from
Youth Ventures Joint Powers Authority of Oakland, CA Josephina Alvarado Mena, Chief Executive Officer,
Youth Ventures Joint Powers Authority - PowerPoint Presentation - Safe Passage Joint Powers Authority One - pager - Elev8 Oakland One - pager - Stanford Social Innovation
Review - Integrating
Youth Services Preparing High School Students for Post-Secondary Success Jimmy Casas, Principal, Bettendorf High School Joy Kelly, Associate Principalt, Bettendorf High School Tim Carlson, Principal, Sycamore Community School District 427 - Creating Career Academies PowerPoint Presentation Project - based Learning Jaime Stephanidis, Consultant, American Institute for Research Fausto Lopez, Consultant, American Institute for Research - PowerPoint Presentation - Essential Elements of Project Based Learning - Project Planning Form - Tips for Effective Facilitation - Things to Consider When Developing a Project Ensuring a Continuum of Care and Support for Students: How one community is developing a strategic collaboration between their middle schools and high schools Fanny Diego, Contracts Administrator, Enlace Chicago P - 20 Council: A systems - level scale - up of education initiatives across Illinois Miguel del Valle, Chair, Illinois P - 20 Council - Illinois P - 20 Council Executive Report - Illinois P - 20 Council Full Report - Illinois P - 20 Org.
• Speaker, National Pathways to Adulthood: A convening on
Youth in Transition — 2011 • Centenary Methodist, Speaker, Homeless / Runaway
Youth Awareness Workshops — 2011 • Speaker, Missouri SYAB
Youth Empowerment Conference — 2011 • Federal Grant Reviewer, Administration for Children and Families: Improving Service Delivery to
Youth in the Child Welfare System — 2011 • Federal Grant Reviewer, Office of Family Assistance: Healthy Marriage Promotion and Responsible Father - Hood Grants — 2011 • Federal Grant Reviewer, Administration of Children and Families Grant
Review: Improving
Outcomes for
Youth in Childwelfare — 2011 • Federal Grant Reviewer, Administration of Children and Families Grant
Review: Community Centered Healthy Marriage and Fatherhood — 2011 • Federal Panel Chair, Administration of Children and Families Grant
Review: Pathways to Responsible Fatherhood — 2011
Solution - Focused brief therapy in schools: A
review of the outcome literature, Children & Youth Services Review, 31, 464
review of the
outcome literature, Children &
Youth Services
Review, 31, 464
Review, 31, 464 - 470.
Common factors in relation to Child and
Youth Care therapeutic practice Assay and Lambert (1999) in establishing the empirical case for common factors in therapy, refer to meta - analytic
outcome reviews.
An Early Childhood Education and Support Intervention for Kinship Families Littlewood, Strozier, & Whittington (2014) Children and
Youth Services
Review, 38 View Abstract Highlights
outcomes from the Kin As Teachers (KAT) Program, an early childhood education program specifically designed for children living with a grandparent or other relative.
The Child and Family Services
Reviews (CFSRs) enable the Children's Bureau to ensure conformity with Federal child welfare requirements, to gauge the experiences of children,
youth, and families receiving State child welfare services, and to assist States as they enhance their capacity to help families achieve positive
outcomes.
Dr. Brown's research publications have included: Self - cutting and sexual risk among adolescents in intesive psychiatric treatment; Promoting safer sex among HIV - positive
youth with hemophilia: Theory, intervention, and
outcome; Predictors of retention among HIV / hemophilia health care professionals; Impact of sexual abuse on the HIV - risk - related behavior of adolescents in intensive psychiatric treatment; Heroin use in adolescents and young adults admitted for drug detoxification; and Children and adolescents living with HIV and AIDS: A
review
After
reviewing background statistics and research on
outcomes for
youth who leave foster care without a permanent family, the bulletin looks at Federal legislation enacted to improve these
outcomes.
The first of its kind, the
review showed 461 cases of links between racism and child and
youth health
outcomes.
The Nest is undertaking an evidence
review and public consultation to highlight what works to improve
outcomes for children and
youth.
Permanency
Outcomes for Toddlers in Child Welfare Two Years After a Randomized Trial of a Parenting Intervention Spieker, Oxford, & Fleming, (2014) Children and Youth Services Review, 44 View Abstract Reports on child welfare outcomes of a community - based, randomized control trial of Promoting First Relationships, a 10 - week relationship - based home visiting program, on stability of children's placements and permanency status 2 years after enrollment into the study; includes findings and a dis
Outcomes for Toddlers in Child Welfare Two Years After a Randomized Trial of a Parenting Intervention Spieker, Oxford, & Fleming, (2014) Children and
Youth Services
Review, 44 View Abstract Reports on child welfare
outcomes of a community - based, randomized control trial of Promoting First Relationships, a 10 - week relationship - based home visiting program, on stability of children's placements and permanency status 2 years after enrollment into the study; includes findings and a dis
outcomes of a community - based, randomized control trial of Promoting First Relationships, a 10 - week relationship - based home visiting program, on stability of children's placements and permanency status 2 years after enrollment into the study; includes findings and a discussion.
Prevention of Child Maltreatment in High - Risk Rural Families: A Randomized Clinical Trial With Child Welfare
Outcomes Silovsky, Bard, Chaffin, Hecht, Burris, Owora, et al. (2011) Children and
Youth Services
Review, 33 (8) View Abstract Shares results from a randomized clinical trial of SafeCare ® training augmented for rural high - risk population, and compares them to standard home - based mental health services to examine reductions in future child maltreatment reports, as well as risk factors and factors similar to child maltreatment.
The first round of Child and Family Service
Review findings show this systems change model of practice is effective in promoting improved
outcomes for children,
youth, and families in sites with systems of care initiatives.
Examining African American Fathers» Involvement in Permanency Planning: An Effort to Reduce Racial Disproportionality in the Child Welfare System (PDF - 193 KB) Coakley (2008) Children and
Youth Services
Review, 30 View Abstract Examines the extent to which African - American fathers» involvement in permanency planning influences children's placement
outcomes using a secondary data analysis of child welfare case records.
Permanency
Outcomes of Children in Kinship and Non-Kinship Foster Care: Testing the External Validity of Kinship Effects Koh Children and
Youth Services
Review, 32 (3), 2010 View Abstract Examines whether the effects of kinship care can be generalized across States by using Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System (AFCARS) data obtained for five States that participated in the Fostering Court Improvement project: Arizona, Connecticut, Missouri, Ohio, and Tennessee.
Treatment needs to be targeted at major modifiable risk factors and its
outcome measured objectively.26 It should preferably be at an early age as conduct disorder can be reliably detected early, 5 has high continuity, 27 is amenable to treatment at a young age, 4 and is very hard to eradicate in older children.28 In this section I discuss interventions for general aggressiveness only in children under 12; interventions targeting
youth crime have been excellently
reviewed by Farrington.29
Exhaustive peer -
reviewed research confirms that the absence of a father is the single most reliable predictor for a whole roster of negative
outcomes: low self - esteem, parental alienation, high school dropout (71 % are fatherless), truancy, early sexual activity, promiscuity, teen pregnancy, gang membership, imprisonment (85 % of jailed
youth are fatherless), drug abuse, homelessness (90 % of runaway children have an absent father), a 40 times higher risk of sexual abuse and 100 times higher risk of fatal abuse.
Green, B.L., Ayoub, C., Bartlett, J.D., Von Ende, A., Furrer, C., Chazan - Cohen, R., Vallotton, C. & Klevens, J. (2014) The Effect of Early Head Start on Child Welfare System Involvement: A First Look at Longitudinal Child Maltreatment
Outcomes, Children and
Youth Services
Review.
As noted above, the redesigned income management measure makes provision for people within the categories of disadvantaged
youth and long - term welfare payment recipients to apply for exemptions from the scheme and for merits
review of the
outcomes of their applications.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the peer -
reviewed literature that examines risk or protective factors for discontinuity, or
outcomes proximal to discontinuity, for older foster
youth.