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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results
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Schneider, Barbara; Broda, Michael; Judy, Justina; Burkander, Kri – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
With a rising demand for a college degree and an increasingly complicated college search, application, and selection process, there are a number of interventions designed to ease the college-going process for adolescents and their families. One such intervention, the College Ambition Program (CAP), is specifically designed to be a whole-school…
Descriptors: High School Students, Intervention, School Culture, High Schools
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Castleman, Benjamin L.; Page, Lindsay C. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
Despite decades of policy intervention to increase college entry among low-income students, substantial inequalities in college going by family income remain. Policy makers have largely overlooked the summer after high school as an important time period in students' transition to college. During the post-high school summer, however, students…
Descriptors: Low Income Groups, High School Graduates, Summer Programs, Counselors
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Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
In data derived from student interviews, students describe how they see teacher-student relationships function for them in their experience of school, their personal development, and their academic success. These relationships are central to students' ability to feel connected at school and to their emerging identities. Students describe how…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Mentors, Interviews, Teacher Student Relationship
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Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth; Noam, Gil G. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
Because schools rarely provide guidelines for teachers that outline how they should conduct personal relationships with students, teachers must wrestle individually with how to establish, communicate, and maintain clear boundaries in their interactions. As schools work to become more personal environments, school administrators will need to help…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Mentors, Interpersonal Communication, Interpersonal Competence
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Noam, Gil G.; Bernstein-Yamashiro, Beth – New Directions for Youth Development, 2013
This article examines the kinds of relationships that nonteacher educators, especially youth development practitioners working in after-school settings, have with students. It addresses the fact that these adults in schools have an explicit youth-oriented and relational approach, find out many productive and anxiety-provoking facts about their…
Descriptors: After School Programs, School Personnel, Interprofessional Relationship, Social Cognition
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Gassman, Julianne; Gleason, Michael C. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2011
Organizational leaders often work to retain their employees and teach them the knowledge needed in becoming future organizational leaders. The purpose of the study examined in this article was to determine how mentoring within Camp Adventure Child and Youth Services contributes to the development of students selected to deliver programs to…
Descriptors: Mentors, Youth Programs, Training Methods, Training Objectives
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Karcher, Michael J.; Nakkula, Michael J. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2010
This opening article defines the ways in which three mentoring interaction elements--focus, purpose, and authorship--distinguish between effective and ineffective mentoring relationship styles. The framework described can help mentors better understand the difference between prescriptive and instrumental styles and differentiate laissez-faire from…
Descriptors: Mentors, Interaction, Power Structure, Interpersonal Relationship
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Keller, Thomas E.; Pryce, Julia M. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2010
This chapter employs a conceptual framework based on the relationship constructs of power and permanence to distinguish the special hybrid nature of mentoring relationships relative to prototypical vertical and horizontal relationships common in the lives of mentor and mentee. The authors note that mentoring occurs in voluntary relationships among…
Descriptors: Mentors, Social Experience, Youth Programs, Interpersonal Relationship
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Karcher, Michael J.; Herrera, Carla; Hansen, Keoki – New Directions for Youth Development, 2010
Whether relational or goal-directed interactions are most useful in youth mentoring has been frequently debated, but until recently, little work had been done to understand how such interactions manifest to create viable relationship styles. The authors' findings in the first study they explore in this article support Karcher and Nakkula's…
Descriptors: Mentors, Models, Training, Children
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Nakkula, Michael J.; Harris, John T. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2010
Measuring the various structural aspects of the organizing framework for this volume and relating them to match quality and relevant developmental outcomes is a critical step toward assessing the framework's utility for practitioners, policymakers, and program evaluators. Nakkula and Harris take a step in that direction by exploring core…
Descriptors: Mentors, Evaluators, Prediction, Models
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Pryce, Julia M.; Silverthorn, Naida; Sanchez, Bernadette; DuBois, David L. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2010
The authors examine GirlPOWER! an innovative program that uses structure and group-based activities to enhance one-to-one mentoring relationships for young adolescent girls from the perspective of the focus, purpose, and authorship dimensions of mentoring relationships that Karcher and Nakkula described. The discussion draws on several sources of…
Descriptors: Mentors, Early Adolescents, Females, Gender Issues
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Cavell, Timothy A.; Henrie, Joye L. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2010
Lunch buddy mentoring is a particular kind of school-based mentoring program: college student mentors meet twice weekly during school lunch with mentees, and a new mentor is provided each semester. The program is designed to benefit elementary school children who are highly aggressive or chronically bullied. Novel to lunch buddy mentoring is a…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Mentors, College Students, Partnerships in Education
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Larose, Simon; Cyrenne, Diane; Garceau, Odette; Brodeur, Pascale; Tarabulsy, George M. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2010
This chapter reports findings from the evaluation of an academic mentoring program for late adolescents that highlight the role of exposition to structured activities and mentors' use of some behavioral strategies. Specifically, different types of interactions in mentoring (such as discussing personal projects, resolving academic problems, and…
Descriptors: Mentors, Late Adolescents, Learning Activities, Interpersonal Relationship
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Hamilton, Stephen F.; Hamilton, Mary Agnes – New Directions for Youth Development, 2010
This article is the first of three brief commentaries on this volume. The authors are highly influential pioneers in the study of youth mentoring relationships, and their contributions helped shape the focus of the conceptual framework featured in the opening article by Karcher and Nakkula. Their commentary sheds light on the history of key issues…
Descriptors: Mentors, Interpersonal Relationship, Goal Orientation, Youth Programs
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Marshall, Dave; Shaver, Karen – New Directions for Youth Development, 2010
This commentary lends a global practitioner perspective on the utility of this volume to the efforts of mentors and mentees and mentoring program developers. Dave Marshall and Karen Shaver, of Big Brothers Big Sisters New Zealand and Canada, respectively, offer keen insights into the value of creating a shared language for discussing mentoring…
Descriptors: Mentors, Cultural Differences, Foreign Countries, Organizations (Groups)
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