Sentences with phrase «youth participants from»

In addition to the commission of this new work by Bambitchell, the grant supports associated programming activities with youth participants from the Toronto region.
Youth participants from each site were selected to attend the meeting and receive leadership development training.

Not exact matches

Through an arrangement between Bolling AFB (Washington, D.C.) and Fort Belvoir (Va.), Andrews AFB Youth Sports participants play against teams from leagues that operate under similar philosophies.
Extensive interior renovations on all aspects of the venue were made to serve everyone from preschool youth and athletes, to fitness and cultural arts participants, to birthday party and private rental customers.
Leagues and recreation departments need to take proactive measures to protect their league's reputation from nightmares like what happened in Greely, but most importantly, they need to protect the safety (physical and emotional) of their youth participants.
Notably, unlike Virginia's law, the policy expressly empowers game officials to remove athletes from play if they are suspected of having suffered a concussion (a power that I have been advocating for many years game officials be given, and a power conferred on game officials by laws at the state level in only Arizona, Iowa, and Ohio), and requires that coaches who disregard the safety and well being of a youth sports participant as it related to concussions be subject to indefinite suspension (only Pennsylvania and Connecticut have laws which penalize coaches for violating their statutes)
The 10 km mini marathon race, which is modelled after world - class marathon events like Boston Marathon and Lagos MTN Marathon, will feature 10,000 participants, 6,200 of which will be drawn from members of the Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (O'YES).
NYPD's Community Affairs officers, along with volunteer police officers from around the City work closely with the Police Athletic League to coach, mentor and compete in athletic contests with community youth, allowing all participants to develop positive and lasting relationships.
«Our county - wide participation grew from 656 youth and 60 finalists in 2010 to 844 participants and 70 finalists last year,» Picente said.
It is about time to shift the role of the youth in the party from being passive followers to active participants in building our party with their creativity and energy to mobilize our communities for Development in Freedom.
Using data from a nationally representative sample of youth who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), a group of researchers led by Dr. Kathleen Merikangas of the National Institute of Health Intramural Research Program, evaluated symptoms of ADHD and its subtypes in 1,894 participants aged 12 - 15 years based on parent reports of symptomatology.
Anthony P. Kontos, PhD, and colleagues from the University of Pittsburgh and Cornell University studied 468 participants, 8 - 12 years of age, from 4 youth tackle football leagues, consisting of 18 teams.
For the study, Chen and McElwain examined data from 913 study children (50 percent were boys; 78 percent were non-Hispanic white) and their friends who were participants in the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development.
35 per cent of NEET participants suffered from depression compared to 18 per cent of non-NEET youths and 14 per cent had generalised anxiety disorder, compared to 6 per cent of their non-NEET peers.
The study, published in the Journal of Youth and Adolescence, relied on self - reported stress from participants to determine the cause and clinical markers including blood pressure, body mass index, glucose levels and others to determine subsequent health effects.
While none of the original performers are still with the cast, Bob Cilman, the choir's demanding conductor and the Executive Director of the Northampton Arts Council, is still pushing the current participants to take on new and often challenging musical styles, including songs from the alternative rock band Sonic Youth and soul singer James Brown.
The conference, with participants from over 30 countries, will be of interest to health professionals, youth workers, educators, policy makers, and anyone involved in the prevention and treatment of drug addiction.
Bowen Butlin from Tuggerah Lakes Secondary College Tumbi Umbi Campus was a participant in last year's Youth Frontiers program.
Participants will explore Out of Eden Learn, an online program that brings youth from diverse backgrounds together for learning experiences focused on slow looking and listening; exchanging perspectives; and connecting individual lives and larger human stories.
Highlights from News Stories about the Coca - Cola Valued Youth Program Six Young Tutors Win 2017 National Essay Contest Awards Six students received prizes in a national competition among participants in the IDRA Coca - Cola Valued Youth Program, a nationally - recognized cross-age...
In 2016 — 2017, NAZA provided 1,683 hours of trainings to 394 participants from NAZA - funded and non-NAZA-funded partners on how to deliver high - quality programs, including fostering positive youth development.
The home building project helps at - risk youth successfully transition from school to the workforce while rebuilding their communities, helping participants work toward a high school diploma or GED while gaining experience in the construction industry.
ALSC Announces Great Interactive Software for Kids Registration for ALSC's Online Education Courses Is Now Open ALSC Announces Exceptional Web Sites for Children 2009 Mora Award Received by San Francisco, Topeka & Shawnee County Public Libraries ALSC Selects 28 Participants for Bill Morris Seminar Liven Up Your Library Service through ALSC Online Education Courses ALSC Selects 2010 Emerging Leader Melanie Lyttle Follow the ALA Youth Media Awards Live from Boston on January 18, 2010 ALSC Professional Awards & Grants Help Libraries and Librarians during Tough Economic Times ALSC Student Sessions ALSC Revises «Competencies» Document ALSC Announces Exceptional Web sites for Children ALSC Announces Bound to Stay Bound and Melcher Scholarship Winners Back to School with ALSC Online Education Riverside County (Calif.) Library System to Host 2010 Arbuthnot Lecture ALSC Oral Histories Celebrate the Past ALSC Offers Second William C. Morris Seminar: Book Evaluation Training at Midwinter 2010 ALSC Kids!
New Día brochure, webinars offered in January Two weeks to register for ALSC online courses ALSC, PLA offer Every Child Ready to Read webinar Updated Great Early Elementary Reads bibliography released ALSC's Great Websites for Kids relaunches with fresh new design ALSC online courses start January 16 ALA Youth Media Awards webcast available to 10,000 viewers Abrams named 2012 ALSC Emerging Leader ALSC releases new Dia website ALSC releases Children's Graphic Novel Core Collection More selections added to ALSC's Great Websites for Kids ALSC Morris Seminar applications now being accepted ALSC's «Children and Libraries» honored with writing award ALSC releases Fall 2011 online education schedule ALSC names Robina Button 2011 Spectrum Scholar ALSC offers Newbery / Caldecott Mock Elections digital download and webinar Miami (Ohio) University chosen as site for 2012 Arbuthnot Lecture More Great Websites for Kids from ALSC 2011 Spectrum Scholarship winners announced ALSC announces winners of Bound to Stay Bound, Melcher scholarships Every Child Ready to Read launches new Web site Belpre Award celebrates 15th anniversary with «Quinces» celebration at Annual Conference An updated guide to the Newbery and Caldecott awards ALSC offers webinar on family programming in a tough economy Día 101 webinar available for purchase from ALSC Advanced sales for Every Child Ready to Read ® toolkit begin Dr. Carolyn S. Brodie elected ALSC 2012 - 2013 president Five choices for ALSC spring online courses ALSC & PLA to offer Sneak Peek Webinar for Upcoming Every Child Ready to Read toolkit Día 2011 book list is now available Celebrating 15 years of children, cultures and books ALSC offers new round of spring webinars ALSC President's Program to discuss serving special needs, autism in the library The best programming ideas for building a culture of literacy through Día Book discount for Día 101 participants ALSC names 2011 Penguin Award winners Día publicity tools now available ALSC presents first - ever Día 101 webinar Register your Día event with ALSC ALSC tabs West Palm Beach as 2011 BWI Award winner ALSC invites host site applications for 2012 Arbuthnot Lecture with Peter Sís ALSC Recognizes Three Libraries with Bookapalooza Pat Mora to Celebrate Día's 15th Anniversary in Tucson ALSC Presents Biddeford (Maine) with 2011 Hayes Award Richmond (Calif.) PL Wins 2011 Light the Way Grant ALSC Names Carlson Distinguished Service Award Winner ALSC Awards Bechtel Fellowships to Penny, Kaplan Registration Open for 2011 Arbuthnot Lecture in St. Louis Registration Continues for ALSC Online Courses Newbery and Caldecott award winners speak out Clare Vanderpool, Erin E. Stead win Newbery, Caldecott Medals Peter Sís to deliver 2012 Arbuthnot Honor Lecture Batchelder Award honors Delacorte Press for «A Time of Miracles» Eric Velasquez, Pam Muñoz Ryan win Pura Belpré Awards Eric Velásquez y Pam Muñoz Ryan ganan premios «Pura Belpré» Paul R. Gagne and Melissa Reilly Ellard win 2011 Carnegie Medal for «The Curious Garden» Kate DiCamillo, Alison McGhee and Tony Fucile win Geisel Award for «Bink and Gollie» Listening Library wins 2011 Odyssey Award for «The True Meaning of Smekday» Sy Montgomery, Nic Bishop win 2011 Sibert Medal Author / Illustrator Tomie dePaola wins 2011 Wilder Award ALSC Announces 2011 Notable Children's Books ALSC Names 2011 Notable Children's Recordings ALSC Announces 2011 Notable Children's Videos
From Thursday, July 21, until Sunday, July 24, more than 100 participants (most of them youth from around the Bay Area) will be hiking the length of the Golden Gate National Parks to celebrate the National Park Service Centennial, and we will be beaming the adventure to you on our Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and parksconservancy.org/packingthepaFrom Thursday, July 21, until Sunday, July 24, more than 100 participants (most of them youth from around the Bay Area) will be hiking the length of the Golden Gate National Parks to celebrate the National Park Service Centennial, and we will be beaming the adventure to you on our Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and parksconservancy.org/packingthepafrom around the Bay Area) will be hiking the length of the Golden Gate National Parks to celebrate the National Park Service Centennial, and we will be beaming the adventure to you on our Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and parksconservancy.org/packingtheparks.
Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy intern Hailey Gavin interviews Frederick Bryant, left, and Ian Tottle, participants with Youth Conservation Corps from Martinez, before the hike began this morning.
In honor of the National Park Service Centennial in 2016, more than 100 backpackers (70 of them youth participants) trekked from July 21 - 24 through these parklands, exploring the sites and stories along the way and sharing the joys of outdoor adventure.
The youth crew consisted of LINC interns from the Parks Conservancy, Greenagers with San Francisco Rec & Parks, and participants in YMCA programs.
WYSTC will be celebrating its 21st anniversary in 2012 and the conference remains the only one of its kind as it is specific to the US$ 165 billion youth travel industry, bringing together over 450 organisations and 800 participants from 80 countries.
Youth artwork is selected by the participants through submissions from partner organizations, schools, and community - based organizations, and Youth Curators take on a central role in constructing their own vision of a creative space.
(2004), which additionally brought youth together across urban and rural environments through Tauqsiijiit, an onsite residence and youth media lab located at the heart of the exhibition with participants from: Igloolik Isuma Productions, Qaggiq Theatre, Siqiniq Productions, Daybi, Tungasuvvingat Inuit Youth Drop In Centre (Ottawa), 7th Generation Image Makers (Native Child and Family Services of Toronto), Debajehmujig Theatre Group (Wikwemikong) and Qaggiq Theatre (Iqalyouth together across urban and rural environments through Tauqsiijiit, an onsite residence and youth media lab located at the heart of the exhibition with participants from: Igloolik Isuma Productions, Qaggiq Theatre, Siqiniq Productions, Daybi, Tungasuvvingat Inuit Youth Drop In Centre (Ottawa), 7th Generation Image Makers (Native Child and Family Services of Toronto), Debajehmujig Theatre Group (Wikwemikong) and Qaggiq Theatre (Iqalyouth media lab located at the heart of the exhibition with participants from: Igloolik Isuma Productions, Qaggiq Theatre, Siqiniq Productions, Daybi, Tungasuvvingat Inuit Youth Drop In Centre (Ottawa), 7th Generation Image Makers (Native Child and Family Services of Toronto), Debajehmujig Theatre Group (Wikwemikong) and Qaggiq Theatre (IqalYouth Drop In Centre (Ottawa), 7th Generation Image Makers (Native Child and Family Services of Toronto), Debajehmujig Theatre Group (Wikwemikong) and Qaggiq Theatre (Iqaluit).
The Royal couple met with the young winners of our Page Turner competition, whose works hang in the gallery, pupils from Northdown Primary School and Hartsdown Technology College who were involved in activities in the Clore Learning Studio, and participants from our current and past community projects; Artworks, Blank Canvas, Cultural Ambassadors, The Great Art Quest, Generate and Art of Sound, as well as our Youth Navigators.
Participants came from all over Europe, ranging from Croatia, Finland, Russia, Germany, Belgium, Ukraine, Poland, UK, Ireland, Lithuania, Hungary, France, from many different Young Friends of the Earth groups, and youth and environmental organisations including 350.org and UKYCC.
In this recent appellate decision, a participant in a Sudbury youth soccer program who suffered a personal injury as the result of an accident in which a metal goal post flipped over onto him during a team practice can not sue for any alleged negligence arising from the improper placement of the posts.
Children's Participation in Justice Processes: Finding the Best Ways Forward, Results from the Survey of Symposium Participants was prepared by Joanne Paetsch, Dr. Lorne Bertrand and John - Paul Boyd and is the first written output from the «Children's Participation in Justice Processes: Finding the Best Ways Forward» two - day symposium presented by the CRILF and the Alberta Office of the Child and Youth Advocate.
Instructing children from ages 8 - 14 in the proper techniques of sports including tennis, basketball, soccer, hockey, track, and volleyball, supervising up to 15 youth participants at any one time in classes, practices, and games.
New Roles for Families in Child Welfare: Strategies for Expanding Family Involvement Beyond the Case Level E. Williamson & A. Gray, Child and Youth Services Review, 33, pp. 1212 — 1216, 2011 Describes findings from a series of retrospective interviews with Systems of Care participants regarding capacity - building activities and lessons learned for family involvement.
All data were collected in participants» residences using two African American field researchers who met with each family to allow separate and simultaneous data collection from the PC and the target youth.
Participants in the Northwestern Juvenile Project included 1829 male and female youth (aged 10 - 18 years) who were randomly sampled from intake into the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center (CCJTDC) from November1995 through June 1998.
A study of 2,757 participants from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth examined how spouses» relative earnings (i.e., who makes more money) influences likelihood of cheating.
Study participants were identified during a 5 - year period from court records of adjudicated youths (N = 6909).
Limitations include participants were only assessed at posttreatment, were recruited conveniently from a sample already accessing a drop - in center indicating they might be more amenable to change or respond differently to treatment efforts than youth who do not access drop - in centers, the research assistants were not blinded to the treatment condition that youth were assigned, and youth were aware of the possible treatment conditions.
Both parents and youth from the intervention condition reported a significant reduction in family conflict at follow - up, compared with control participants who reported no change.
The other studies had a nonequivalent group design: 2 studies compared e-therapy data with data from previously published studies and 1 study used naturalistic independent samples of participants provided by a youth counseling service.
What has been missing from the PALS program is a longer term connection for program participants such as what the 4 - H Youth Development Program can offer via an afterschool 4 - H Program opportunity.
We addressed some of the prior criticisms of EBT research by ensuring that (1) participants and study context were clinically representative, (2) there were no systematic differences in clinician competence across conditions (ie, all clinicians were randomly assigned), and (3) the sample would include the ethnic diversity that critics have found insufficient in the randomized controlled trial literature.17 - 20 Accordingly, we obtained samples from outpatient treatment programs that served the general public across a broad demographic and income range, we included only youths whose families sought treatment (ie, no recruiting or advertising), all treatment was provided by professional clinicians employed in the participating programs, and all treatment was provided in those programs (ie, not in university laboratory clinics).
Study participants were 153 youths and their parents who were receiving care at a tertiary pediatric diabetes center from a multidisciplinary team.
Participants consisted of 2458 youth from the longitudinal Taiwan Youth Project (youth from the longitudinal Taiwan Youth Project (Youth Project (TYP).
Participants were 152 community - based early adolescent individuals (72 female, 80 male; mean age 12.6 years, s.d. 0.4 years; range 11.4 — 13.7 years), from a larger sample of 2479 grade 6 students (from 97 separate schools, representative of Victorian school sector type and socioeconomic classification) as part of a broader adolescent development study conducted at Orygen Youth Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia, the aim of which was to investigate risk factors for psychopathology during adolescence.
Since youth workers in empowerment programs are likely to encounter participants who may have trauma symptoms as well as come from groups that have experienced historical trauma, they must be informed and trained on the impact of trauma on those youth.
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