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Youth Empowerment Solutions for Peaceful Communities (YES) is an interdisciplinary
community change project developed by The Flint Youth Violence Prevention
(YVPC) academic-community partnership.
Empowerment theory, positive youth development, and ecological theory
guided the project development, evaluation, and plans for sustaining the
work after the funding period ends. Click
on this link to view project brochure.
The
goals of the project are to provide youth with opportunities for meaningful
involvement in preventing youth violence and creating community change,
enhance neighborhood organizations’ ability to engage youth in their
activities, and change the social and physical environment to reduce and
prevent violence (especially youth violence). The project involves youth
in the process of changing community physical and social environments
and includes three components: 1) youth empowerment activities; 2) neighborhood
organization development; and 3) community development projects that involve
youth and organizations working together. Youth empowerment activities
include workshops for program planning, budgeting, implementation, and
evaluation; opportunities to engage their peers in community change efforts;
developing ethnic identity and pride; and working with adults to achieve
these goals. Click
on this link to view YES logic model.
The project
focuses on youth and neighborhood organizations in the Holmes Middle School
attendance area in Flint, Michigan. The Longfellow Middle School attendance
area will serve as a comparison community. These areas were selected because
they have characteristics associated with high levels of youth violence,
high rates of crime, as well as vital neighborhood organizations, and
a history of community activism.
In
September 2005, fifteen students from our intervention school were recruited
to form the YES Council. At its meetings members discussed community assets,
plans for community projects, future workshops, photovoice presentations,
team recruitment, and the leadership and positive youth development activities
provided by the Flint Odyssey House Health Awareness Center. Click
on this link to view examples of photovoice photos and freewrites.
The Council volunteered
with “Lights On,” a national community education event that
focuses attention on the importance of after school programs for youth.
They were asked to speak at the State Capitol to represent the need for
after-school programs. They also took part in a world hunger workshop
sponsored by the University of Michigan-Flint.
School assemblies
were conducted to recruit students for the YES Teams composed of 7th and
8th grade students. Forty-five students participate in YES Teams. Youth
leadership Council students and the Youth Teams meet after school together.
Team building activities build cohesiveness and to prepare students to
work together on community projects. Field trips spark discussions on
topics such as cultural pride, community assets, and creating ideas about
including art in upcoming community projects. As an initial project, students
and neighborhood block club leaders will turn a vacant lot into a “Peace
Park” in May 2006. Four additional community improvement projects
will be conducted during the summer of 2006.
The
evaluation includes a quasi-experimental pre-posttest comparison group
design and analysis of multiple outcomes across levels of analysis. We
will assess change in community norms, fear, social cohesion and social
capital using an existing community survey in the two neighborhoods. Assessment
of changes in youths’ violent attitudes, norms, and behavior; ethnic
identity and pride; and mental health will be assessed using a school-wide
survey. We will compare the intervention and comparison neighborhoods
on several community level measures including police incident data, hospital
injury reports (e-codes), school suspension data. We will also conduct
process evaluation to insure the fidelity of the intervention and to adapt
the project when issues arise. Several participating organizations have
agreed to help sustain and disseminate the program if it is found to be
effective.
We have completed the "Speak to Your Health" Community Survey
of randomly selected Flint residents (adults) from all census tracts in
Flint and in Genesee County and have started data analyses to assess the
adults' perceptions of crime and neighborhood safety in the two middle
school attendance areas.
For more
information, contact Everett Roberts at (810) 238-1962 or by email at
everettr@umich.edu.
YES Steering Committee
C.S.
Mott Foundation
Catholic Charities
Challenge Day
Community Matters
Flint Community Schools, Office of School Safety
Flint Odyssey House, Inc.
Flint Police Department
GCCARD-Teen Jury
Genesee County Family Court
Genesee County Health Dept.
Genesee County Prosecutor’s Office
Genesee County Family Independence Agency
Genesee Intermediate School District
Genesys Health System
Hurley Medical Center Trauma Outreach
IMA (Industrial Mutual Association)
Light of the World Foundation
Motherly Intercession
Mott Children's Health Center
Neighborhood Roundtable
Office of School Safety, FCS
U.S. Attorney's Office
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