What Adolescents Learn in Organized Youth Activities: A Survey of Self-Reported Developmental Experiences

Authors
Hansen, D. M. Larson, R. W. Dworkin, J. B.
Publication year
2003
Citation Title
What adolescents learn in organized youth activities: A survey of self-reported developmental experiences.
Journal Name
Journal of Research on Adolescence
Journal Volume
13
Issue Number
1
Page Numbers
25-55
DOI
10.1111/1532-7795.1301006
Summary
Extracurricular activities and youth programs can be valuable contexts for positive youth development. Perceived opportunities for development were compared across extracurricular activities, school classes, and time with friends among high school students in a small Midwestern city. Youth may have more opportunities for positive development during extracurricular activities than during time in school or with friends, and different extracurricular activities may provide different developmental benefits.
Key Findings
Students reported more personal development opportunities in extracurricular activities than school classes or time with friends, including learning to take initiative, reflecting on identity, gaining self-knowledge, and building basic emotional, cognitive, and physical skills.
Students reported more experiences promoting interpersonal development (i.e., building relationships, teamwork, and leadership) in extracurricular activities than school or friend time.
Certain extracurricular activities (e.g., faith-based, service, academic and leadership activities) provided more development opportunities than others (e.g., arts, vocational clubs, sports).
Implications for Military Professionals
Collaborate with programs for military youth to encourage participation in community extracurricular activities, particularly those with ample development opportunities
Help develop and disseminate information about areas for development among youth and activities that promote youth development for use in programs with military youth
Implications for Program Leaders
Educate parents in military families about the benefits of youth extracurricular activities
Provide military youth with activities that facilitate a variety of types of development
Implications for Policy Makers
Continue to provide military families with youth programs that enhance youth’s skills and competencies, including those needed to adapt to stress and change
Recommend education for professionals leading military youth programs to learn about positive youth development and how to provide opportunities and activities for development
Methods
Students in 9th, 11th, and 12th grades at a high school in a small Illinois city were recruited, and 450 of the 646 recruited students participated (70% response rate).
Students completed surveys regarding their experiences and opportunities for development in a range of extracurricular activities compared to time at school and with friends.
Students’ perceived opportunities for development were compared across extracurricular activities, school classes, and time with friends; types of extracurriculars were also compared.
Participants
Participants included 450 students (56% females), including 156 freshmen, 157 juniors, and 137 seniors from a high school in a small Illinois city.
Students identified as White (60%), Black (26%), Latino (4%), Asian-American (2%), and Native American (2%); some reported another race/ethnicity or did not report race/ethnicity (6%).
Students reported that 69% of mothers and 64% of fathers had at least some college education.
Limitations
Only youth from 9th, 11th, and 12th grades in one Midwestern school were surveyed, and results may not generalize to students in other grades, schools, or geographical locations.
Opportunities for youth development were self-reported by youth and may have been impacted by other perceived factors (e.g., enjoyment, importance) of the activities.
Due to the cross-sectional nature of the data, no causal conclusions can be drawn.
Avenues for Future Research
Explore whether youth in multiple types of activities have more positive personal and interpersonal development outcomes than youth in one type of activity
Examine other factors that may impact the development opportunities youth are provided in each context, such as individual abilities, socioeconomic status, or extraversion
Compare positive youth development outcomes between male and female students across a variety of activities
Design Rating
2 Stars - There are some flaws in the study design or research sample, but those flaws do not significantly threaten the ability to make conclusions based on the data.
Methods Rating
2 Stars - There are no significant biases or deficits in the way the variables in the study are defined or measures and conclusions are appropriately drawn from the analyses performed.
Limitations Rating
2 Stars - There are a few factors that limit the ability to extend the results to an entire population, but the results can be extended to most of the population.
Focus
Civilian
Target Population
Population Focus
Abstract
This research inventoried adolescents’ reports on different developmental and negative experiences in organized youth activities, including extracurricular and community-based activities. High school students’ experiences were assessed using a newly developed instrument, the Youth Experiences Survey (YES). These youth reported higher rates of learning experiences in youth activities than in 2 other major contexts of their lives. Youth activities were associated with experiences related to initiative, identity exploration and reflection, emotional learning, developing teamwork skills, and forming ties with community members. The findings also suggest that different youth activities offer distinct patterns of learning experiences. Service, faith-based, community, and vocational activities were reported to be frequent contexts for experiences related to identity, prosocial norms, and links to adults. Sports were a frequent context for those related to identity work and emotional development.
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