Putting youth at the center of community building

著者

    • Nitzberg, Joel

書誌事項

Putting youth at the center of community building

Joel Nitzberg, issue editor

(New directions for youth development : theory practice research, 106)

Jossey-Bass, c2005

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This issue offers an explanation of community building priniciples and how they can be applied working with youth. The authors provide examples of how community building can be connected to youth development and how youth can be change agents. The community building field emphasizes the importance of networking and building relations, enabling all members of a community to be change agents. Self-determination and change are not new to youth workers. What is new is expanding the work to enable youth to apply these skills to the greater community. This is the 106th volume of the Jossey-Bass quarterly report series "New Directions for Youth Development".

目次

  • Editor's Notes (Joel Nitzberg). Executive Summary. 1. The meshing of youth development and community building (Joel Nitzberg) Youth development is an approach to help young people move toward maturity through sustained relationships and meaningful and empowering experiences. Community building offers a comprehensive approach to strengthening communities. Meshing these approaches creates powerful experiences that change both youth and the communities they live in. 2. Comprehensive community building initiatives-ten years later: What we have learned about the principles guiding the work (Anne C. Kubisch) For over twenty years, people across the country have engaged in comprehensive initiatives to strengthen their communities. The lessons learned have focused on changes that extend beyond individuals and what occurs at the community level. 3. Using the coproduction principle: No more throwaway kids (Edgar S. Cahn, Christine Gray) Coproduction provides an approach to youth development that says: enable youth to use the skills they have to help others
  • honor that contribution with rewards
  • and use the process of helping others as an opportunity for youth to gain social and communications skills, self-knowledge, selfrespect, problem-solving competence, anger management, and conflict resolution abilities. 4. Youth using research: Learning through social practice, community building, and social change (Alexander Lynn) Students, teachers, and staff are learning how to develop an educational philosophy and practice that is predicated on serving the community. 5. "I love ballet": Arts incentives for adolescent health and community development (Lisa S. Fliegel) Art therapy can be a community-linked treatment, integrating the knowledge of diagnostic categories and symptomotology with a therapeutic response grounded in theories of adolescent mental health treatment. 6. Teen Empowerment: Youth, police, and neighbors in partnership (Mary Fusoni) The Center for Teen Empowerment inspires young people, and the adults who come in contact with them, to think deeply about the most difficult social problems in their schools and communities. 7. Hand-drumming to build community: The story of the Whittier Drum Project (Nathan Neil Stone) Drumming can be used in a tangible way to focus on building community. The power of drumming includes enabling youth to express their individual voices while blending with a group. 8. Somerville Youth Council (Remi Manoela Owadokun, Pearlie Aviles) The Somerville Youth Council was developed by youth over a four-month period to create opportunities for youth in this Massachusetts city to identify the needs of their peers and formulate strategies to address these needs. Index.

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