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Utilizing an Internship Program to Increase Quality, Impact, and Sustainability of Youth Programs. Jessica Russo Erica Gates Urban Youth Development Office University of Minnesota. Objectives. Understand internship program as a benefit to quality, impact, and sustainability
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Utilizing an Internship Program to Increase Quality, Impact, and Sustainability of Youth Programs Jessica Russo Erica Gates Urban Youth Development Office University of Minnesota
Objectives • Understand internship program as a benefit to quality, impact, and sustainability • Learn components of successful internship program • Discover tools and strategies for implementation
Urban Youth Learn Partnering with communities to develop effective youth programs Urban 4-H Youth Development Program Model • Flow • Sustainability • Build Partnerships • Build Internship Program • Build Volunteer Program • Curricula • Evaluation
70/30 Delivery/Development 90/10 Development/Delivery Staff Plan Shift Go
Needs Assessment • Funding Cuts • Transition from Delivery to Program Development • Partners asking for low-cost, part-time program deliverers • System of support and training for staff
Benefits for Partners • Low-cost deliverers • Recruitment of Staff • Training • Additional support and supervision • Quality program with educational plans
Benefits for Interns • “There are so many positive things I could say to describe my internship experience. I went into it expecting to help youth learn and grow, but somewhere along the way I ended up growing too.” • “I thought the internship really prepared me well to become experienced in what it was like to work with a diverse group of youth. It was definitely worth working with the kids, seeing their challenges, helping them deal with those challenges, and preparing them for a successful future.” • “I felt that this was a good experience for me. It helped me to become more confident while working with youth. I’ve learned new behavioral management skills and was exposed to many different activities that I had never thought of before. I felt like a significant part of the team and not just a back up.”
Benefits for Us • Impact • in number of youth and adults reached • in number of partnerships • Training and growth for new youth workers • Quality • Connection to 4-H and sense of belonging • Imbedded youth development philosophies and educational curricula • Increased planning time • Sustainability • Visibility of 4-H • Lower cost • System for youth to stay connected to 4-H program • Base of volunteers
Director 1 FTE Manager NYL Minneapolis St. Paul 1 FTE Educator Ramsey 1 FTE Educator Hennepin 1 FTE Manager Minneapolis St. Paul Afterschool 1 FTE Program Coordinator St. Paul 1 FTE Program Coordinator Hennepin 1 FTE Program Coordinator Hennepin 1 FTE Positions that are not filled University Interns 30 part-time/temporary employees Afterschool Teaching and Program Staff Members 21 part-time/temporary employees Position currently filled by temporary staff. This position is not filled permanently. Urban Youth Development Office Staff Plan
Successful Internship Program • Focus • Strong partnerships • System of support
5. Apply Do Apply Reflect Support Built on Experiential Learning 1. Experience 2. Share 4.Generalize 3. Process
REFLECTION and MAKING CONNECTIONS
Strong Partnerships • Commitment • Safety • Quality • Presence
Our system of support • Training • Communication • Goal-setting • Review
Lessons Learned • It’s a process! • Connecting to University/College departments • Setting clear expectations • Continually adapting
Contact information Jessica Russo, Associate Extension Professor 612.624.7625; pier0239@umn.edu Erica Gates, Program Coordinator 612.624.7625; gates015@umn.edu Urban 4-H Youth Development 495 Coffey Hall 1420 Eckles Avenue St. Paul, MN 55108