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Hours of opportunity. Vol. 2, The power of data to improve after-school programs citywide / Jennifer Sloan McCombs [and others].

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Santa Monica, CA : RAND, 2010.Description: 1 online resource (xxii, 90 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780833051028
  • 0833051024
Other title:
  • Power of data to improve after-school programs citywide
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Hours of opportunity Volume 2, The power of data to improve after-school programs citywide.DDC classification:
  • 371.8 22
LOC classification:
  • LC34.4 .H687 2010eb
Online resources:
Incomplete contents:
Introduction -- Cities' Development and Use of Out-of-School-Time Management Information Systems -- Ensuring Data Quality -- Providers' Use of Data from Management Information Systems -- Conclusion -- Appendix: Survey Administration, Sampling, Weighting, and Modeling.
Summary: High-quality out-of-school-time (OST) programs have a positive effect on youth development, but many cities have found it difficult to address the challenges of expanding and improving the quality of programs offered to underserved and high-need students. In response, The Wallace Foundation sponsored an initiative to help five cities increase collaboration, access, quality, information sharing, and sustainability in their OST systems. In many cities that provide financial support for OST, funding is funneled through a variety of youth-serving agencies that lack basic information about the programs they fund. The second in this three-volume series describes how the grantees and three other cities used management information systems to collect and use data on OST programs, including enrollment, attendance, and student outcomes. Cities' use of management information systems to collect and report data on OST programs is relatively new, so the experiences of the case-study cities offer valuable lessons for the field. For example, management information systems are capable of supporting OST system improvement but require careful planning, the use of data from these systems can lead to additional funding and support, the customization of web-based systems encourages their use, providing high-quality training to providers increases the use of the systems, and many providers are overburdened by requirements to use multiple management information systems, so eliminating redundancies and coordinating data requirements can ensure more efficient program provision and reporting.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 87-90).

Introduction -- Cities' Development and Use of Out-of-School-Time Management Information Systems -- Ensuring Data Quality -- Providers' Use of Data from Management Information Systems -- Conclusion -- Appendix: Survey Administration, Sampling, Weighting, and Modeling.

High-quality out-of-school-time (OST) programs have a positive effect on youth development, but many cities have found it difficult to address the challenges of expanding and improving the quality of programs offered to underserved and high-need students. In response, The Wallace Foundation sponsored an initiative to help five cities increase collaboration, access, quality, information sharing, and sustainability in their OST systems. In many cities that provide financial support for OST, funding is funneled through a variety of youth-serving agencies that lack basic information about the programs they fund. The second in this three-volume series describes how the grantees and three other cities used management information systems to collect and use data on OST programs, including enrollment, attendance, and student outcomes. Cities' use of management information systems to collect and report data on OST programs is relatively new, so the experiences of the case-study cities offer valuable lessons for the field. For example, management information systems are capable of supporting OST system improvement but require careful planning, the use of data from these systems can lead to additional funding and support, the customization of web-based systems encourages their use, providing high-quality training to providers increases the use of the systems, and many providers are overburdened by requirements to use multiple management information systems, so eliminating redundancies and coordinating data requirements can ensure more efficient program provision and reporting.

Print version record.

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