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Informationen zum Autor Sam Piha and Georgia Hall are the authors of Preparing Youth for the Crossing From Adolescence to Early Adulthood: New Directions for Youth Development, Number 111, published by Wiley. Klappentext There is a growing concern that young people in the United States are reaching the age of eighteen unprepared for the primary challenge of young adulthood: successfully joining the workforce of continuing on to higher education or vocational training in hoped of achieving financial autonomy. An alarming number of young people leave school without a diploma, and many of those still in school are disinterested or disengaged. Many have not found outside career-related interests and will enter the next phase of their lives without the needed experience and skills to enter the workforce or the social capital to help them along the way. In order to see outcomes improve for older youth, especially low-income youth of color, we must have a better understanding of their developmental needs in order to create supported pathways for their eventual transition to adulthood. This will require new policies to improve coordination at the systems level and increased attention to expanding their access to supportive institutions and services. This volume of New Directions for Youth Development takes a step in that direction by examining the developmental issues facing older youth and focusing on innovative strategies employed by programs across the country to better meet the needs of these youth. It also considers the implications for policymakers and funders in taking the support of older youth to scale. Zusammenfassung This volume examines how developmental issues facing older youth impact their crossover into early adulthood! and investigates innovative strategies being employed to better meet the needs of these youth. Implications for policymakers and funders in taking the support of older youth to scale are also considered in this volume. Inhaltsverzeichnis Editors' Notes (Sam Piha! Georgia Hall). Executive Summary. 1. The passage to adulthood: Challenges of late adolescence (Nicole Zarrett! Jacquelynne Eccles) This chapter examines the major developmental changes and challenges associated with late adolescence! as youth seek to acquire and consolidate the competencies! attitudes! values! and social capital necessary to make a successful transition into adulthood. 2. Designing for diversity: Incorporating cultural competence in prevention programs for urban youth (Marion J. Goldstein! Pedro A. Noguera) This chapter affirms the importance of prevention programs in helping urban youth of color avoid the risks of substance abuse! but states that many such programs are ineffective. The authors offer an alternative program strategy that places diversity with respect to culture! class! and environment at the center of prevention efforts. 3. Teens and technology: Preparing for the future (Georgia Hall) This chapter looks at the integration of technology skill building into youth development experiences with consideration of gender and race differences in technology access and utilization along with challenges that at-risk teens face. 4. First Things First: A framework for successful secondary school reform (James P. Connell! Adena M. Klem) The chapter introduces First Things First! a school reform framework grounded in research about how young people develop and how schools promote students' engagement and learning in the process. 5. Three high school after-school initiatives: Lessons learned (Sarah Barr! Jennifer Birmingham! Jennifer Fornal! Rachel Klein! Sam Piha) This chapter reviews the insights and lessons learned from three afterschool initiatives focused on the needs of high school youth. 6. Young people and social action: Youth participation in the United Kingdom and United States (Joan Arches! Jennie Fleming) Two youth projects in...