scholarly journals Cultivating Youth Affinity for College Within the Context of Campus-Based Summer Camps

2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 64-85
Author(s):  
Barry A. Garst ◽  
Ryan J. Gagnon ◽  
Thomas Clanton ◽  
Jay Woodward

College and university-based (CUB) summer camps are a prominent pre-collegiate experience targeting middle and high school adolescents, which research suggests may enhance college aspirations and preparedness, develop academic knowledge and skills, and influence future career choices. This study examines factors that predict the relation between affinity for college, program engagement and support, college major selection, and social–emotional outcomes stemming from youth involvement in a CUB camp based on data collected from 641 middle and high school-aged youth who completed an online questionnaire on the last day of the CUB camp. The findings validated a 4-factor model comprised of college brand awareness, college relational expectations, college academic interest–science, and college academic interest–technology. Further, the structural equation model (SEM) results suggested a relation between affinity for college, program engagement and support, and social–emotional outcomes. In addition, a CUB camp student’s lack of a college major had a significant negative direct effect on some dimensions of affinity for college including college brand awareness, college relational expectations, and college academic interest–science. CUB camp providers can use the results of this study to better articulate how their programs might impact adolescent decision making related to college, as well as inform how CUB camp providers may intentionally create affinity spaces that maximize student awareness of college brands as well as their future expectations for the college experience.

2017 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 288-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina Flynn Brown ◽  
Michelle Kilpatrick Demaray ◽  
Jaclyn E. Tennant ◽  
Lyndsay N. Jenkins

2021 ◽  
pp. 001698622110194
Author(s):  
James R. Andretta ◽  
Frank C. Worrell

The Adolescent and Adult Time Inventory–Time Attitude Scales (AATI-TA) were used to examine the association between time attitudes and self-reported academic and social–emotional outcomes in 967 academically talented adolescents ( M age = 14.27, SD = 1.42) attending a summer educational program. The AATI-TA consists of six subscales assessing positive and negative attitudes toward the past, present, and future. Bivariate associations between AATI-TA subscales scores and outcomes were small. Cluster analyses of AATI-TA scores yielded several profiles, labeled Pessimists, Negatives, Ambivalents, and Positives. Students with Positive and Ambivalent profiles reported greater course enjoyment, higher perceived academic rank, and higher expected summer GPA than their peers with the Negative profile, even though the groups did not differ on how challenging they perceived the courses to be, time spent on homework, and studying. In keeping with previous research using the AATI-TA, Positives reported the most favorable outcomes, Negatives the least, and Ambivalent and Pessimistic adolescents fell between these two groups. Future research on time attitudes should include measures of actual academic performance.


Author(s):  
Ros Baumann ◽  
Henriette van Rensburg

Australian Defence Force (ADF) members' children present as a unique subpopulation of students. These students often experience schooling interruption as a result of posting (relocation) mobility inherent within the service requirements of their ADF parents. This chapter explores the impact of such mobility and interrupted schooling on educational achievement. Educational achievement consists of two key aspects: Social-emotional outcomes and Academic outcomes. Social-emotional outcomes are currently supported through the Defence Support Mentor (DSM) program. Academic outcomes are examined through the lens of Reading/Literacy testing results and Mathematics testing results. Academic achievement for ADF children impacted by mobility and schooling interruption remains largely unexplored within the Australian context. A conceptual framework is presented, which identifies potential causes of negative impacts upon ADF students' academic achievement.


Author(s):  
Rebecca B. Silver ◽  
Megan Beers ◽  
Leandra Godoy ◽  
Susan Dickstein

This chapter describes the triage assessment, a structured way for mental health consultants to conceptualize concerns identified via developmental screening processes and frame feedback to support family engagement with next steps. This chapter (a) describes the rationale, goals, and critical elements of triage assessments; (b) suggests pragmatic guidelines for implementation; and (c) discusses lessons learned from experience conducting triage assessments in community settings, including the importance of promoting family engagement and considerations for increasing sustainability. This chapter describes work conducted in pediatric primary care clinics serving young children at high risk for adverse developmental, behavioral, and social-emotional outcomes. However, the purpose, essential components, and structure of triage assessments are relevant as second-stage screening practices for all settings. As screening becomes broadly implemented, the triage assessment helps providers respond to red flag concerns highlighted by first-stage screening practices and support families to get help to address these concerns.


2021 ◽  
pp. 000-000
Author(s):  
Kendra M. Lewis ◽  
Stefanie D. Holloway ◽  
Niloofar Bavarian ◽  
Naida Silverthorn ◽  
David L. DuBois ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document