Brenda McLaughlin is founder and president of The Learning Agenda, a consulting firm dedicated to building the capacity of organizations working to close the opportunity gap for underserved youth and families. In this issue, she discusses her organization's efforts, research-policy-practice connections, and future directions for the OST field.
Issue 21
Dr. Thomas Akiva, the winner of the 2016 OST SIG Scholar Award, is a faculty member in the department of Psychology in Education at the University of Pittsburgh. His research focuses on understanding and improving OST programs for children and youth. In this issue he discusses the role of OST research as an essential component of public scholarship to educate diverse democracies (this year's conference theme). He discusses youth-adult interaction and research-practice partnerships.
Issue 20
In this issue, Dr. Pálsdóttir discusses informal learning and democracy in education. Her discussion of youth centers and holistic education in Iceland is informative for readers in the U.S. and globally.
Issue 19
Zakia Redd is the Deputy Program Area Director for the Youth Development team at Child Trends. In this issue she discusses research in community schools, the youth CONNECT initiative, and Child Trends' strong capacity to communicate research findings broadly. She also discusses the importance of targeted research to understand how effective programs work.
Issue 18
In this issue, Dr. Sara Hill discusses the 10th anniversary of the AERA SIG and her work with the Afterschool Matters journal, the National Afterschool Matters Practitioner Fellowship, and the Youth Today OST Hub.
Issue 17
In this issue, Dr. Bettina Dahl Sondergaard discusses the role of AERA in international youth development research--which is currently quite limited--and how that role might increase. She also discusses research and practice in education, and international OST STEM research.
Issue 16
Dr. Kay Fukuda is the Director of two place-based educational programs that operate in eight schools along the Waianae Coast: PALS and PLACES. In this issue she discusses culturally responsive learning opportunities, the importance of local context, and more.
Issue 15
Dr. Charles Smith is the founder and Executive Director of the David P. Weikart Center for Youth Program Quality, a division of the Forum for Youth Investment. In this issue Dr. Smith discusses research-practice partnerships, the impact of improvement systems like the Youth Program Quality Intervention, and diverse learning communities in OST.
Issue 14
Dr. Ken Anthony is the Director of Professional Development and Research for the Connecticut After School Network. In this issue he discusses youth development, professional development, and the importance of connections between school and afterschool personnel.
Issue 13
Gil Noam, Ed. D., Ph.D., is the founder and director of the Program in Education, Afterschool & Resiliency (PEAR) at Harvard University. In this issue he discusses social justice, social emotional learning, STEM, and the future of the OST field.
Issue 12
Dr. Kimberley Boyer is the Central Valley Afterschool Foundation’s (CVAF) executive director and serves as the chief editor of the new Journal of Expanded Learning Opportunities (JELO) a peer- reviewed, online, open-access publication. In this issue she discusses research, practice, the CVAF and JELO.
Issue 11
Dr. Kallen Tsikalas is a Senior Research Lead at the Girl Scout Research Institute (GSRI). In this issue she discusses Girl Scouts as an avenue for civic engagement and social justice and recent Girl Scouting research.
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