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Showing all 11 results Save | Export
National Center for Homeless Education, 2022
Consistent access to sufficient quantities and quality of food is highly important for a child's physical, mental, and emotional development, but children experiencing homelessness frequently face hunger as well as poor physical and behavioral health outcomes. Children who do not get enough food to eat may experience a variety of physical, mental,…
Descriptors: Food, Hunger, Nutrition, Homeless People
Tucker, Laura Packard; Dworsky, Amy; Van Drunen, Molly – Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago, 2020
This Formative Evaluation Lessons Learned template captures the major findings and lessons learned from the formative evaluation of the Youth Transitions Partnership (YTP) program in Alameda County, California. The YTP program is an intervention built around the core components of intensive case management and Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT).…
Descriptors: Formative Evaluation, Program Evaluation, Program Implementation, Intervention
Scott, Mindy E.; Moore, Kristin Anderson; Hawkins, Alan J.; Malm, Karin; Beltz, Martha – Child Trends, 2012
Child Trends reviewed existing evidence on a somewhat neglected topic: relationship education for youth in foster care. The goals of this research review were to identify the needs of disadvantaged young people around intimate partner relationships, to identify evaluated relationship education programs, to highlight and synthesize common themes…
Descriptors: Youth, Child Welfare, Foster Care, Runaways
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Rosario, Margaret; Schrimshaw, Eric W.; Hunter, Joyce – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2012
Although lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) youth with a history of homelessness (running away or being evicted from their homes by parents) report more psychological symptoms than homeless heterosexual peers, it is unclear whether symptoms are due to homelessness, given the absence of a non-homeless comparison group. This study longitudinally…
Descriptors: Substance Abuse, Sexual Abuse, Homeless People, Adolescents
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Nebbitt, Von E.; House, Laura E.; Thompson, Sanna J.; Pollio, David E. – Journal of Child and Family Studies, 2007
Previous research indicates that runaway and homeless youth often achieve positive outcomes after shelter stays however few studies have examined how these outcomes are achieved. This study employs qualitative methods to explicate this phenomenon. Twenty-five providers and 21 youth from four shelters participated in this study. Youth were…
Descriptors: Human Services, Runaways, Homeless People, Youth
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Schaffner, Laurie – Adolescence, 1998
Runaway behavior is presented from the point of view of 26 teenagers in a rural New England shelter. Reasons for running include seeking freedom from abusive treatment, and a search for connection. Running was found to be a "last resort" behavior. Many youths expressed the desire for reconciliation. (Author/EMK)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Family Problems, Homeless People, Intervention
Ivers, Kathryn J.; Carlson, Helena M. – 1987
This report presents an assessment of the situation of homeless girls, paying particular attention to the issue of juvenile prostitution. A review of research on prostitutes was conducted, and common elements that seem to present themselves in these studies are identified, including sexual and/or physical abuse, runaway/throwaway status,…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Community Programs, Females, Helping Relationship
Fesko, Sheila Lynch; Graham, Steven; Temelini, David – 1999
This document reports on two studies by the Bridges to Inclusion project concerning issues surrounding runaway and/or homeless youth with disabilities. The first study surveyed emergency adolescent shelter providers funded by the Family and Youth Service Bureau. Findings addressed types of disabilities frequently identified or suspected in…
Descriptors: Agency Cooperation, Disabilities, Eligibility, Emergency Programs
Taylor, Jennifer; Mosteller, Frederick – 1999
More than half of runaway adolescents cite poor family communication and conflict as the primary reasons for running. Runaways (.5-1.5 million annually) generally arrive on the streets with few survival skills and little money. They are often subject to abuse of various sorts, and many eventually resort to criminal activity or use drugs in efforts…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Antisocial Behavior, Counseling, Dropouts
Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. Senate Committee on the Judiciary. – 1993
This document presents witness testimonies and prepared statements from a Senate hearing held in Atlanta, Georgia to examine the problem of crime among youth and to discuss the reauthorization of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974. In his opening statement, Senator Fowler notes that the reauthorization puts greater…
Descriptors: Adolescents, At Risk Persons, Child Abuse, Child Neglect
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Iudashina, N. – Russian Education and Society, 2004
In this article, the author describes the two types of street children: (1) those children whose vagrancy was forced upon them by families and circumstances; and (2) those children who have an urge to go wandering, not because they are unhappy and have been abused but because they have an urge for it. Even though these children do run away from…
Descriptors: Runaways, Homeless People, Psychological Characteristics, Family Environment