U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

"We Got to Stand up and Speak": Youth in High-poverty, High-crime Urban Communities of Color Reflect on Their Cross-age Mentoring Program

NCJ Number
309700
Journal
Children and Youth Services Review Volume: 163 Dated: August 2024 Pages: 107685
Author(s)
Katherine Tyson McCrea; Kaleigh V. Wilkins; Maryse Richards; Ogechi “Cynthia” Onyeka; Kevin M. Miller; Cara DiClemente; et al
Date Published
August 2024
Annotation

This paper presents the research methodology and results from a project to develop theory about outcomes and change mechanisms in a mentoring program for low-income community African American and Latino youth.

Abstract

This project draws from youth voices to develop theory about outcomes and change mechanisms in a cross-age mentoring out of school program with urban African American and Latino youth living in low-income communities. With instructors’ supports, African American and Latino mentors (N = 148, ages 14–20) in four U.S. urban, high-poverty communities of color mentored children weekly for an average of 16 sessions, followed by a debriefing session. Researchers used qualitative, participatory methods to elicit mentor perspectives about what made their program impactful. Diverse qualitative data were collected by staff and youth and analyzed thematically. Outcomes adolescent mentors deemed meaningful were: 1) developing good character, specifically persistence, leadership and listening skills, patience, respectful collaborations, goal-oriented hopefulness, and more positive racial identities, and 2) building trustworthy, supportive relationships with mentees, peers, and instructors. Mechanisms mentors regarded as generating outcomes were: 1) being active agents in program implementation and evaluation, and also contributing knowledge about themselves, and 2) the fulfillment of caring for community children, which youth regarded as a partial remedy for deprivations and injustices their communities experience. Differences in emphasis based on gender are described. Outcomes and generative mechanisms are discussed in relation to youths’ community cultural wealth. Comprehensively empowering youth to co-lead program development, implementation, evaluation and theorizing can improve the fidelity of scientific knowledge to youths’ strengths and priorities, and yield theories of intervention consonant with youths’ cultural wealth. (Published Abstract Provided)