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Youth Developement
Community Excel is dedicated to contributing to better futures for all youth. We share with many the conviction that too many children and youth are at the risk of poor outcomes because opportunities are too few, too fragmented, too problem-focused, and too distant from family and neighborhood.
  


Our mission is to be both opportunistic and strategic on a national and local level in shifting the public debate and commitment from youth problems to youth development.

 

 

Our goals are:

1) to make "what works" available in order for youth to be productive and involved citizens;

2) to increase the number of people, places, and possibilities available to young people;

3) to strengthen and support local systems in order to build a comprehensive youth development infrastructure; and

4) to increase public will to support positive development for all youth.

 

At the core of this framework are three basic tenets:

1) Problem-free is not fully prepared -- preventing high-risk behaviors is not enough. Our expectations for young people must be high and clear. Positive outcomes should be defined and monitored as carefully as negative behaviors.

2) Academic skills are not enough -- young people are engaged in the development of a full range of competencies -- personal, social, vocational, health, civic. Focusing on academic competence skews discussions of resource allocation across systems and of teaching and learning methodologies within systems.

3) Competence, in and of itself, is not enough -- Skill building is best achieved when young people are confident of their abilities, contacts and resources and called upon by their communities to use their skills. Meeting youths' basic needs for safety, structure, relationships, membership, independence and contribution is critical to the development of competencies. Attention must be paid to both the content of learning and the contexts in which the learning occurs.

 
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