Teens in the Somali Diaspora: An Evaluative Program Study

Program evaluation is a critical part of program sustainability because evaluation can inform improvements and document impact. Here, 2 Minnesota organizations came together in partnership with the Somali American community to work toward a shared vision, which was to develop a new sustainable progr...

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Main Author: Jennifer A. Skuza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2019-06-01
Series:Journal of Youth Development
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jyd.pitt.edu/ojs/jyd/article/view/703
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spelling doaj-bdc26a5b4aea4ee893edaabbb587d0da2020-11-24T21:56:16ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghJournal of Youth Development2325-40172019-06-0114215316510.5195/jyd.2019.703564Teens in the Somali Diaspora: An Evaluative Program StudyJennifer A. Skuza0University of Minnesota, Extension Center for Youth DevelopmentProgram evaluation is a critical part of program sustainability because evaluation can inform improvements and document impact. Here, 2 Minnesota organizations came together in partnership with the Somali American community to work toward a shared vision, which was to develop a new sustainable program that prepared refugee and immigrant youth for their educational and workforce futures while supporting their cultural way of being. This article shares the evaluative study of this program, which reached teens in the Somali diaspora living in Minnesota. The program team had a long-term interest in developing an evidence-based model to suit this special population; this evaluation study was viewed as a step toward becoming evidence-based. The Somali American community supported the study because they valued the program and saw its cultural relevance. The evaluation used pre- and post-program surveys to capture program impacts in 2 outcome areas: workforce preparation and higher education preparation. Results showed that youth participants made gains in their perceptions of both outcome areas. However, gains displayed were unrelated to program attendance. Limitations and recommendations for future evaluation plans are provided.http://jyd.pitt.edu/ojs/jyd/article/view/703youth developmentrefugeeimmigrantevaluationsustainability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer A. Skuza
spellingShingle Jennifer A. Skuza
Teens in the Somali Diaspora: An Evaluative Program Study
Journal of Youth Development
youth development
refugee
immigrant
evaluation
sustainability
author_facet Jennifer A. Skuza
author_sort Jennifer A. Skuza
title Teens in the Somali Diaspora: An Evaluative Program Study
title_short Teens in the Somali Diaspora: An Evaluative Program Study
title_full Teens in the Somali Diaspora: An Evaluative Program Study
title_fullStr Teens in the Somali Diaspora: An Evaluative Program Study
title_full_unstemmed Teens in the Somali Diaspora: An Evaluative Program Study
title_sort teens in the somali diaspora: an evaluative program study
publisher University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
series Journal of Youth Development
issn 2325-4017
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Program evaluation is a critical part of program sustainability because evaluation can inform improvements and document impact. Here, 2 Minnesota organizations came together in partnership with the Somali American community to work toward a shared vision, which was to develop a new sustainable program that prepared refugee and immigrant youth for their educational and workforce futures while supporting their cultural way of being. This article shares the evaluative study of this program, which reached teens in the Somali diaspora living in Minnesota. The program team had a long-term interest in developing an evidence-based model to suit this special population; this evaluation study was viewed as a step toward becoming evidence-based. The Somali American community supported the study because they valued the program and saw its cultural relevance. The evaluation used pre- and post-program surveys to capture program impacts in 2 outcome areas: workforce preparation and higher education preparation. Results showed that youth participants made gains in their perceptions of both outcome areas. However, gains displayed were unrelated to program attendance. Limitations and recommendations for future evaluation plans are provided.
topic youth development
refugee
immigrant
evaluation
sustainability
url http://jyd.pitt.edu/ojs/jyd/article/view/703
work_keys_str_mv AT jenniferaskuza teensinthesomalidiasporaanevaluativeprogramstudy
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