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Empowerment Research with Children & Adolescents

Empowerment Research with Children & Adolescents. Methodologies for a new era summer school School of Applied Social Studies, University College Cork 24 June 2011 Matt Morton Centre for Evidence-Based Intervention, University of Oxford. Aims.

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Empowerment Research with Children & Adolescents

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  1. Empowerment Research with Children & Adolescents Methodologies for a new era summer school School of Applied Social Studies, University College Cork 24 June 2011 Matt Morton Centre for Evidence-Based Intervention, University of Oxford

  2. Aims • Conceptualize youth emp’t (frameworks & defining features) • Review theory & evidence on youth emp’t • Review tools & approaches to measuring emp’t process • Review tools & approaches to measuring emp’t outcomes/impacts

  3. Growing interest • UNCRC (Art. 12) • UK Youth Matters • African Union, Afr. Youth Charter • World Bank (World Dev’t Rep., ‘07) • Jordan, Nat’l Youth Strategy

  4. Conceptualizing Empowerment

  5. Defining youth emp’t "Empowerment is the expansion of assets and capabilities of young people to participate in, negotiate with, influence, control, and hold accountable institutions that affect their lives.” - used by World Bank & UNICEF

  6. Model 1: Lofquist’s ‘Spectrum of Attitudes’ Objects Recipients Resources Done to… Done for… Done with…

  7. Exercise on Social Work Practice

  8. Youth emp’t in context

  9. Model 2: Hart’s Ladder of Children’s Participation

  10. Model 3: Wong et al’s Typology of Youth & Empowerment (TYPE) Pyramid Shared control Pluralistic- Youth have voice and active participant role - Youth and adults share control Empowerment Empowerment Symbolic- Youth have voice- Adults have most control Independent- Youth have voice and active participant role - Adults give youth most control Vessel- Lack of youth voice & participation - Adults have total control Adult control Autonomous-Youth have voice and active participant role - Youth have total control Youth control

  11. Considerations for studying youth emp’t • Emp’t is defined by process, not content • Models increasingly emphasize role of adults in facilitating emp’t process • Multiple degrees of participation at multiple levels of analysis • Evaluations of youth emp’t programs emphasize setting-level processes

  12. Youth emp’t in cross-cultural context • Beyond ‘WEIRD’ (Western, educated, industrialized, rich & democratic) societies (Henrich et al 2006) • Context collectivist/individualist, hierarchical/horizontal? • Roles and conceptions of youth in the cultural context? (empowered via ‘natural’ society roles) • Males & females have dif’t opportunity structures? • Practical impediments to youth participation (e.g., transportation, working, safety, etc.)

  13. Theory & evidence on Youth Empowerment

  14. Passive interventions don’t work • Drug education-only (e.g., DARE) • “Scared straight” • Short-term/one-off interventions w/o follow-up

  15. Theory • Empowerment theory (Zimmerman 2000) • Strengths perspective theory to social work practice (Healy, 2005) • Social learning/cognitive theory (Bandura 1986) • Self-determination and choice theory (Glasser 1999) • Role theory (Biddle 1986)

  16. Supportive evidence for youth emp’t theory • Top factors related to out-of-school program participation with teens (Deschenes et al 2010) • Many leadership opportunities & Relevance of program agenda • Higher program empowerment related to higher youth outcomes (Smith & Akiva 2008) • Qualitative research indicating benefits for youth, programs, and communities from emp’t (Foster-Fishman et al 2005) • Note: these studies do not demonstrate causality

  17. Neurobiological perspectivesRisk-reward seeking Ernst et al., 2006

  18. Effects of youth empowerment programs (YEPs) on self-efficacy & self-esteem of adolescents (10-19) Systematic review

  19. Search results • From search: 8,789 citations • Included: 3 studies (including Jordan RCT) • Excluded school-based: 3 studies • Main reasons for exclusion: • Intvn: Lacked regular youth participation in decision-making • Study: Not experimental/quasi-experimental controlled design

  20. With School-based Excluded Studies (k=6) PRIMARY SECONDARY

  21. Findings Very few studies; more needed Largely null results on developmental assets More favorable results from (excluded) school-based YEP studies, but evidence v limited Research concentrated in USA

  22. Measuring Process in youth empowerment

  23. Implementation considerations • Staff preparation • Level and quality of training? • Clarity & understanding of Th of Chg across staff? • Org culture of emp’t (including for staff)? • Youth emp’t • Involvement in decision-making (What extent? All or some youth?) • Safe and flexible setting? • Opportunities for mastery experiences? • Feelings of engagement & meaningfulness? • Support & preparation?

  24. Example research tools • Involvement & Interaction Rating Scale (Survey on Youth-Adult Partnerships) – Jones & Perkins (2005) • Learner Empowerment Survey – Fymier et al 1996 • Youth Program Quality Assessment (PQA) (quality settings, observer rating) – Blazevski & Smith 2007

  25. Qualitative research needed… • Better understanding of how concept “youth emp’t” is socially constructed in dif’t contexts (see Hart 2008) • Deeper understanding of the context and conditions in which youth emp’t is supported or hindered • Investigating youth emp’t in terms of ‘diffusion of innovation’ • Exploring ‘active ingredients’ and explaining outcomes • Hypothesis generating for quantitative studies

  26. Measuring Impacts in youth empowerment

  27. Example outcomes • Psychological emp’t (Walker et al 2010) • Youth assets (Oman et al 2010) • Self-efficacy (specific & general) • Social supports (peers, family, school, community) • Prosocial (empathy, helping) • Civic engagement (service, advocacy) • Academic performance (grades, attendance) • Antisocial behavior (e.g., conduct problems, delinquency, substance abuse)

  28. Involving youth in Research & Evaluation

  29. Approaches to youth participation in research • Youth-led research projects • Youth staff help design and implement research projects • Youth representatives on stakeholders advisory boards for research projects • Separate youth advisory boards for research projects

  30. Jordan Youth Action Committee • Out-of-school youth graduating from NFE • Committed & trained staff • 8-week training • Small groups with adult (univ student) facilitators • Youth determined own research questions & methodologies

  31. Thank you! matthew.morton@spi.ox.ac.uk

  32. References • Bandura, A. (1986). Social Foundations of Thought and Action: A social cognitive theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. • Biddle, B. J. (1986). Recent Development in Role Theory. Annual Review of Sociology, 12, 67-92. • Deschenes, S. N., Arbreton, A., Little, P. M., Herrera, C., Baldwin Grossman, J., Weiss, H. B., et al. (2010). Engaging older youth: Program and city-level strategies to support sustained participation in out-of-school time. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Family Research Project and Public/Private Ventures. • Ernst, M., Pine, D. S., & Hardin, M. (2006). Triadic model of the neurobiology of motivated behavior in adolescence. Psychological Medicine, 36(03), 299-312. • Foster-Fishman, P., Nowell, B., Deacon, Z., Nievar, M., & McCann, P. (2005). Using Methods That Matter: The Impact of Reflection, Dialogue, and Voice. American Journal of Community Psychology, 36(3), 275-291. • Glasser, W. (1999). Choice Theory in the Classroom. New York, NY: Harper Collins. • Hart, R. (2008). Stepping Back from ‘The Ladder’: Reflections on a Model of Participatory Work with Children. In A. Reid, B. Jensesn, J. Nikel & V. Simovska (Eds.), Participation and Learning. New York: Springer Netherlands.

  33. References continued • Healy, K. (2005). Social work theories in context: Creating frameworks for practice. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan. • Henrich, J., Heine, S. J., & Norenzayan, A. (2010). The weirdest people in the world? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 33(2-3), 61-83. • Oman, R., Veseley, S., Tolman, E., Aspy, C., & Marshall, L. (2010). Reliability and validity of the youth asset survey: An update. American Journal of Health Promotion, 25(1), e13-e24. • Smith, C., & Akiva, T. (2008). Quality accountability: improving fidelity of broad developmentally focused interventions. In M. Shinn & H. Yoshikawa (Eds.), Toward Positive Youth Development: Transforming Schools and Community Programs. New York: Oxford University Press. • Walker, J. S., Thorne, E. K., Powers, L. E., & Gaonkar, R. (2010). Development of a Scale to Measure the Empowerment of Youth Consumers of Mental Health Services. Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Disorders, 18(1), 51-59. • Zimmerman, M. (2000). Empowerment theory: Psychological, organizational and community levels of analysis. In J. Rappaport & E. Seidman (Eds.), Handbook of community psychology. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.

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