Abstract
The field of after-school programming remains rife with unanswered questions. What constitutes quality in after-school programs? Are after-school opportunities valuable for participants regardless of their quality? Are differences in quality associated with differences in participant benefit? This sub-study of the longitudinal evaluation of The After-School Corporation (TASC) looks at how after-school opportunities with varying features affect urban middle-grades (6-8) adolescents who live in impoverished circumstances. Supported by the William T. Grant Foundation, the study explores the associations between after-school project features and the social and cognitive outcomes of disadvantaged middle-grades participants in TASC programs. The study relies on data collected during the 2001-02 and 2002-03 school years in eight TASC projects serving middle-grades students.
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CITATION STYLE
Russell, C. A., & Reisner, E. R. (2006). Supporting Social and Cognitive Growth Among Disadvantaged Middle-Grades Students in TASC After-School Projects. Journal of Youth Development, 1(2), 47–57. https://doi.org/10.5195/jyd.2006.385
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