After-school programs

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  • Topic
| מספר מערכת 987007537579705171
Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
תוכניות אחרי שעות בית הספר
Name (Latin)
After-school programs
Other forms of name
After-school education
Afterschool programs
See Also From tracing topical name
Education
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q494330
Library of congress: sh2005000275
Sources of Information
  • Work cat.: 2004030627: Making out of school time matter, c2005:ECIP galley (after-school programs)
  • Encyclopedia of American education, c2001(after-school programs: a wide range of public and privately operated academic and nonacademic enterprises to keep children constructively occupied between the offical end of the school day and the time their parents are prepared to care for them at home; operated by public and private schools, government and church agencies, companies, community organizations and private organizations, after-school programs range from pure recreation to pure academics)
  • ERIC, Jan. 12, 2005(descriptor: after school programs)
  • WWW, Feb. 23, 2005(after school; after-school; afterschool)
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Wikipedia description:

After-school activities, also known as after-school programs or after-school care, started in the early 1900s mainly just as supervision of students after the final school bell. Today, after-school programs do much more. There is a focus on helping students with school work but can be beneficial to students in other ways. An after-school program, today, will not limit its focus on academics but with a holistic sense of helping the student population. An after-school activity is any organized program that youth or adult learner voluntary can participate in outside of the traditional school day. Some programs are run by a primary or secondary school, while others are run by externally funded non-profit or commercial organizations. After-school youth programs can occur inside a school building or elsewhere in the community, for instance at a community center, church, library, or park. After-school activities are a cornerstone of concerted cultivation, which is a style of parenting that emphasizes children gaining leadership experience and social skills through participating in organized activities. Such children are believed by proponents to be more successful in later life, while others consider too many activities to indicate overparenting. While some research has shown that structured after-school programs can lead to better test scores, improved homework completion, and higher grades, further research has questioned the effectiveness of after-school programs at improving youth outcomes such as externalizing behavior and school attendance. Additionally, certain activities or programs have made strides in closing the achievement gap, or the gap in academic performance between white students and students of color as measured by standardized tests. Though the existence of after-school activities is relatively universal, different countries implement after-school activities differently, causing after-school activities to vary on a global scale.

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