A Blueprint for Promoting Academic and Social Competence in After-School Programs

A Blueprint for Promoting Academic and Social Competence in After-School Programs

  • Thomas P. Gullotta
  • Martin Bloom
  • Christianne F. Gullotta
  • Jennifer C. Messina
Publisher:Springer Science & Business MediaISBN 13: 9780387799209ISBN 10: 0387799206

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A Blueprint for Promoting Academic and Social Competence in After-School Programs is written by Thomas P. Gullotta and published by Springer Science & Business Media. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0387799206 (ISBN 10) and 9780387799209 (ISBN 13).

School activities alone are not always sufficient to ensure children’s academic progress or socio-emotional development and well-being. And the time when many children typically have the least adult supervision – immediately after school – is also the time that they are at the highest risk to act as perpetrators or become victims of antisocial behavior. Throughout A Blueprint for Promoting Academic and Social Competence in After-School Programs, which focuses on children in grades 1 through 6, noted experts identify the best practices of effective programs and pinpoint methods for enhancing school-based skills and making them portable to home and neighborhood settings. This volume: (1) Analyzes the concepts central to effective after-school programs. (2) Offers developmental, cognitive, and social ecology perspectives on how children learn. (3) Features more than 100 exercises that develop young people’s capabilities for academic, social, moral, and emotional learning – These exercises are ready to use or can be adapted to students’ unique needs. (4) Emphasizes young people’s development as students and as productive members of society during middle to late childhood and early adolescence. (5) Presents explicit theory and evidence that can be used to explain the value of after-school programs for budget proposals. This important book will find an appreciative, ready audience among the program directors who design after-school curricula, the educators who implement them, the mental health and social work professionals who help staff them, and the current crop of graduate students who will create the next generation of programs.