Overview
- Makes available the advice and expertise of leading scholars dedicated to affecting positive youth development
- Provides a multifaceted, multidisciplinary blueprint for social change
- Offers a comprehensive overview of the current state of youth development work
- Promotes individual adult involvement in adolescents’ lives to ensure positive youth development
- Provides a blueprint for mobilizing a society of adults, through volunteer and other programs, to improve the lives of youth
- Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Part of the book series: The Search Institute Series on Developmentally Attentive Community and Society (SISS, volume 4)
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Table of contents (14 chapters)
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Introduction and Conceptual Foundations
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The Context of Adults Helping Youth Develop
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Mobilizing Individual Adults
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Mobilizing Local Groups of Adults
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Mobilizing Societies of Adults
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Commentary
Keywords
About this book
Reviews
From the reviews:
“The volume provides a number of insightful perspectives on positive youth development. … The authors' focus on social solidarity with youths and adults working together is excellent and refreshing. … Mobilizing Adults effectively uses developmental assumptions and theories … for positive youth development. … three broad groups would likely find the book to be a useful reference: (a) Those who do research on youth programs, (b) individuals who work with youths and organize programs to serve them, and (c) policy makers … .” -(Michelle E. Schmidt, PsycCRITIQUES, 52:8, 2007)
"The edited volume … is a collection of applied essays that attempt to draw volunteer recruitment strategies from the research literature in a range of fields. The book is divided into ecological strata that reveal potential sources of volunteers for youth development programs. … This book is rich in examples, and it steers readers towards key research literatures and the strategies they reveal. The book is as much about who volunteers are as it is about how and where to find them." (Michael J. Karcher, Journal of Youth and Adolescence, Vol. 37, 2008)
Editors and Affiliations
About the editors
E. Gil Clary, Ph.D., is chair of the department of psychology at the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, Minnesota. He teaches General Psychology, Experimental Social Psychology, and Personality Theories. Furthermore, he has taught, in collaboration with colleagues in other departments, two honors seminars, one on autobiographies, and a second on the meaning of work.
He completed his education at the University of Georgia (B.A. in psychology, 1975; M.S. in psychology, 1978; Ph. D. in social psychology, 1980). In 1979, he joined the faculty of the College of St. Catherine, first as an instructor (1979-1980), then assistant professor (1980-1985), associate professor (1985-1992), and professor (1992). From 1989 to 1992, Clary was the Endowed Professor of the Sciences at the College of St. Catherine. In 1997, he assumed the position of chair of the department of psychology.
Most of Clary's research centers on the psychology of helping, with much of this focusing on people's involvement in volunteer activities and other forms of community services. More specifically, this research has examined the motivations underlying participation in volunteer work, and with Mark Snyder (University of Minnesota) and other colleagues, this work has resulted in a psychometrically sound inventory for assessing motivations underlying involvement in volunteer work. Finally, this interest in volunteerism recently resulted in a study of the effects of educational programs requiring students to volunteer.Jean E. Rhodes, Ph.D., is a professor in the Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts, Boston. She has written extensively on the role of mentors in promoting positive developmental outcomes among children and adolescents. In addition to studying natural mentors, she and her colleagues have analyzed longitudinal data that were collected from over 1,000 urban adolescents who participated in a national study of Big Brothers BigSisters. The predictors and effects of relationship duration have been studied, as well as the processes that govern mentors' influence. Her findings provide ample evidence of the extraordinary potential of mentoring relationships, while also exposing the rarely acknowledged risk for harm that unsuccessful relationships can render. A deeper understanding of these important relationships may lead to interventions and policies that better address the needs of youth.
Rhodes is currently involved in studies on the role of supportive relationships in the lives of: young mothers; students in school and after-school settings; and immigrant youth. She is a Fellow of APA and the Society for Community Research and Action, a member of the MacArthur Network on the Transition to Adulthood, and author of a monthly research column for the National Mentoring Partnership. Her book, Stand by me: The risks and rewards of youth mentoring, was published by Harvard University Press in Spring 2002.
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Mobilizing Adults for Positive Youth Development
Book Subtitle: Strategies for Closing the Gap between Beliefs and Behaviors
Editors: E. Gil Clary, Jean E. Rhodes
Series Title: The Search Institute Series on Developmentally Attentive Community and Society
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/0-387-29340-X
Publisher: Springer New York, NY
eBook Packages: Behavioral Science, Behavioral Science and Psychology (R0)
Copyright Information: Springer-Verlag US 2006
Hardcover ISBN: 978-0-387-29173-4Published: 16 March 2006
Softcover ISBN: 978-1-4419-3974-6Published: 27 October 2010
eBook ISBN: 978-0-387-29340-0Published: 24 September 2006
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: X, 276
Topics: Child and School Psychology, Clinical Psychology, Social Work, Education, general