Title: READY A Youth Development Outcomes Measure
1Rochester Evaluation of Asset Development for
Youth
- READY - A Youth Development Outcomes Measure
2Project Team
- United Way of Greater Rochester
- Kathy Lewis
- Elizabeth Ramsay
- Rochester-Monroe County Youth Bureau
- Chris Dandino
- Univ. of Rochester Medical Center, Div. of
Adolescent Medicine - Jonathan D. Klein, MD, MPH
- Melissa Matos Auerbach, MA
- Shannon M. Smith
- Sheryl Ryan, MD
- Cheryl Kodjo, MD, MPH
- Premini Sabaratnam, MPH
- Representatives from youth serving agencies in
Rochester
3Participating Agencies included
- Baden Street Settlement
- Big Brothers, Big Sisters of Greater Rochester
- Boy Scouts of America, Otetiana Council
- Boys Girls Club of Rocehster
- Center for Youth Services
- Charles Settlement
- Community Place of Greater Rochester
- Girl Scouts of Genesee Valley
- Hochstein Music School
- Metro Council for Teen Potential
- Southwest Area Neighborhood Association (SWAN)
- Urban League of Rochester
- YMCA of Greater Rochester
4Youth Development
- Philosophy or approach - a set of principles
emphasizing active support of the growing
capacity of young people by individuals,
organizations, and institutions - Characterized by a positive, strength building
orientation - Occurs at home, in school, among peer groups, and
in community-based programs - Has gained importance nationally, in states, and
in local communities
5Community Outcomes
- Local funders are increasingly concerned with
demonstrating effective progress toward outcomes - Existing measures of youth development are
lengthy and complex
6Youth Development Outcomes Measurement Project
- GOAL
- To develop an evaluation tool for YD programs
that met the following criteria - Easy to Use
- Easy to Administer
- Applicable to a Variety of Youth Development
Programs - Useful for Assessment of Impact of Program on
Youth Development of Participants
7Rochester, New York
- City in Monroe County, Western New York
- Population 219,773
- 52 non-white
- 37 ages 19 or less
- Person under age 18 in 34 of households
- 32 of families with children under 18 below
poverty level
Source US Census, 2000
8Youth-Serving Agencies
- Serve the Youth of Rochester through
- case management
- counseling
- homework assistance
- sports programs
- life skills building
- leadership programs
- music lessons
- provision of safe, open recreational spaces
9Three Phase Project
- Phase I Instrument development via a consensus
process - Phase II Piloting to test validity and
reliability of instrument - Phase III Field tests and dissemination
10Phase I Instrument Development - Dec. 2000 -
May 2001
- Meetings with representatives from youth-serving
agencies and funders - Identification of core and optional outcome
measures and questionnaire items - Establishment of face validity of core measures
and measurement strategies
11Identification of Core Outcomes
- Three meetings resulted in list of 54 indicators
and 10 outcomes - peer and adult relationships
- constructive use of leisure time
- basic social skills
- community service
- health maintenance
- decision making process
- responsibility
- understanding boundaries/rules
- positive identity
- independent/daily skills
12Narrowing List of Outcomes
- Agency representatives were asked
- What impact does your program have?
- What would you like to learn to improve the
quality of your program?
13Programs Wanted to Know
- Effectiveness of staff
- Effectiveness of services they provide
- Impact on youth and their families
- Impact of youth involvement in more than one
program - Youth Development philosophy of staff
- Gaps and what programs can do about them
14Consensus Process
- Programs used nominal iterative process to
identify consensus priority areas for youth that
they could impact - First Round 18 constructs
- Second Round 7 constructs
- Top 2 retained
- Third Round 4 constructs
- Top 2 retained
15Outcomes for Operationalization
- Basic Social Skills
- Caring Adult Relationships
- Decision Making Process
- Constructive Use of Leisure Time
16Candidate Questions
- Questions adapted from instruments by
- Add Health
- Boys and Girls Club of America
- Girl Scouts of America
- Metro Council for Teen Potential
- Worcester Youth Development Initiative
- YMCA
17Phase II Piloting the Draft Instrument - May
2001 - March 2002
- Piloting in two phases
- Cognitive interviews to test validity of items
- Field test of internal consistency of items and
feasibility
18A. Cognitive Interviews
- 48 urban and suburban adolescents aged 10 to 17
- Mean completion time 11 minutes
- 70 had no suggestions
- 67 reported survey was easy to complete
- 81 understood everything in the survey
- 98 did not mind answering the survey
- Items re-worded to increase readability (now at
4th grade level) and to simplify concepts
19B. Field Test
- 389 urban and suburban adolescents
- Ages 10 to 19
- Large drop-in programs and smaller, structured
programs - Findings
- Feasible for program staff to administer
- Large groups required more staff time
- Easy for older adolescents
- Some issues remain for younger adolescents
20Field Test Results
- Youth more attached to programs did better on
measures - Four constructs have several good factors for
program use in evaluation - Instrument consists of six factors, corresponding
to three outcomes - Internal reliability scores (as from .5782 to
.8557)
21Factor Analysis Core Outcomes
-
- Self Control
- Empathy Basic Social Skills
- Communication
- Staff Relationships Caring Adult
Relationships - Program Effect
- Decision Making Decision Making
- Constructive Use of Leisure Time
22Factor Analysis - all participants
23Factor Analysis - 13-19 year olds
24Factor Analysis - Reliability
25Phase II Cont
- Slight revision of individual items and
rearrangement of questions leading to final
instrument - Pencil and paper survey
- 40 questions addressing four core outcomes,
program participation, connectedness to program,
and sociodemographic information - Requires between 10 and 15 minutes to complete
- Development of training modules, scoring
templates, and score report generating software
26Phase III Dissemination in Rochester - May
2002 - May 2003
- Summer and Fall 2002 - 11 youth serving agencies
in the Rochester area were trained to use the
instrument and the report generating software - TA provided to agencies to develop appropriate
sampling plans - During the program year of 2002-2003, over 1,000
youth participating in YD programs in the
Rochester area completed surveys
27Current Steps May 2003 - present
- Software and score reports revised based on
qualitative feedback from Year 1 implementation - Continued training and TA to current users
- Dissemination to various other youth development
programs through ACT for Youth Center of
Excellence - Validation studies
28Additional sites
- Alaska - Residential School System served as a
beta test site in school year 02-03 - Erie County, NY - over 75 programs including
youth bureaus and youth boards, and UW and
Department of Youth Services funded programs - Hawaii - Childrens Alliance of Hawaii
- Oswego County, NY - Oswego City-County Youth
Bureau funded programs - Salamanca, NY - 21st CCLC program
- Syracuse, NY - Catholic Charities of Onondaga
County sites - Queens, NY - Queens Child Guidance Center Beacon
OST sites
29Use of Data by Programs
- Internal quality improvement. Examples include
- Reviewing and discussing score reports with staff
and with Boards - Comparing program scores within one agency to
identify opportunities for improvement - Reviewing curricula and current programming
strategies - Discussing program strategies with other similar
programs - Identifying training and technical assistance
needs - Reporting to funders
- Proposal writing
- Sharing data back allowing the creation of an
aggregate community level score report using
de-identified data
30Training and Technical Assistance
- Training, TA, and use of the READY Toolkit are
available to interested users - Fees are based on the number of users and the
level of training and TA required - Options include
- Training and TA provided directly to end users
- One time training provided for end users, and
continuous training and TA provided to a lead
agency which then agrees to provide first line TA
to end users
31READY Toolkit
- READY Toolkit includes a CD which contains
- A Personalizable Instrument Template
- READY Analysis Program
- Toolkit Instructions Manual
- Users Agreement
- Instrument template may be personalized to
contain program names and staff titles - READY Analysis program allows community programs
to enter their own survey data, and generate a
score report - Score report contains summary measures for core
YD outcomes and frequencies for all survey items
32SAMPLE Score Report Pg 1 of 17
33SAMPLE Score Report Pg 2 of 17
34Publications
- Klein JD, Sabaratnam P, Matos Auerbach M, Smith
SM, Kodjo C, - Lewis K, Ryan S, Dandino C.
Development and factor structure of a - brief instrument to assess the impact
of community programs on - positive youth development The
Rochester Evaluation of Asset - Development for Youth (READY) tool.
Journal of Adolescent Health 2006 - 39 252-260.
- Sabaratnam P, Klein JD. Measuring youth
development outcomes for - community program evaluation and
quality improvement Findings from - dissemination of the Rochester
Evaluation of Asset Development for - Youth (READY) Tool. Journal of Public
Health Management and - Practice 2006 6(suppl) S88-S94.
35For more information about the READY tool, please
contact
- Premini Sabaratnam, MPH
- Sr. Health Project Coordinator
- Div. of Adolescent Medicine, University of
Rochester - (585) 273-4616
- Premini_Sabaratnam_at_urmc.rochester.edu
- or
- Jonathan D. Klein, MD, MPH
- Associate Professor of Pediatrics and of
Community Preventive Medicine University of
Rochester - (585) 275-7760
- Jonathan_Klein_at_urmc.rochester.edu
36Or visit...
- The University of Rochester, Division of
Adolescent Medicine, Leadership Education in
Adolescent Health website at - www.urmc.rochester.edu/gchas/div/adol/leah/resourc
es.htm - or
- The ACT for Youth, Center of Excellence website
at www.actforyouth.net