journal :: Rahm, J., Moore, J. C., Martel-Reny, M. (2005). The role of afterschool and community science programs in the lives of urban youth. School Science and Mathematics, 105(6), 283-291.

last updated: 2009-04-24 11:19:59

Abstract

Afterschool and community science programs have become widely recognized as important sanctuaries for science learning for low-income urban youth and as offering them with "missing opportunities." Yet, more needs to be known about how youth, themselves, perceive such opportunities. What motivates youth to seek out such opportunities in the nonschool hours? How do youth describe the doing and talking of science in such programs? Given such descriptions, how do youth perceive the role of these programs in their lives? This paper relies on stories from three youth drawn from a multisited ethnographic study, one site being an afterschool girls-only science program at the elementary level in Canada and the other an Upward Bound Math and Science program in the USA. The paper concludes with a discussion about the ways these programs offered youth a meaningful way to relate to science in concordance with their own lived experiences, resulting in "I will" and "I can" attitudes and a sense of hope for the future within which science becomes a tool for action.


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Authors
  • Jrene Rahm Jrene Rahm
    Associate Professor
    Université de Montréal
  • No_image_small_mask_ffffff John Moore
  • No_image_small_mask_ffffff Marie-Paul Martel-Reny

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Target Audience

Ethnic Groups
Women/Girls
Underserved
Children (6-12)
Youth (13-18)
Inner City Communties

Project Type

Afterschool Program
Community Program

Project Setting

Afterschool

Subject Area

General Science
Informal Learning