WHAT IS HAY?
FACT SHEETS & INFORMATION
HELPING AMERICA’S YOUTH FAQ
LETTER FROM MRS. BUSH
PARTNERING AGENCIES
PHOTO ESSAYS
THE WHITE HOUSE
REGIONAL CONFERENCE - PORTLAND, OR
REGIONAL CONFERENCE - DALLAS, TX
REGIONAL CONFERENCE - SAINT PAUL, MN
REGIONAL CONFERENCE - NASHVILLE, TN
REGIONAL CONFERENCE - DENVER, CO
REGIONAL CONFERENCE - INDIANAPOLIS, IN
NATIONAL CONFERENCE - HOWARD UNIVERSITY
ONLINE EXHIBIT HALL
COMMUNITY GUIDE TO HELPING AMERICA’S YOUTH
FORM A PARTNERSHIP AND MAKE IT WORK
ASSESS YOUR COMMUNITY AND CONNECT ITS RESOURCES
SEARCH FOR PROGRAMS TO HELP YOUTH
GET CONNECTED
CARING ADULTS IN ACTION
POSITIVE YOUTH DEVELOPMENT
RESOURCES FOR CARING ADULTS
ONLINE RESOURCE CENTER
Community Guide
Form a Partnership and Make It Work
Assess Your Community and Connect Its Resources
Search for Programs to Help Youth
Other Resources
Facts About America’s Youth
Risk and Protective Factors
Exhibit Hall
Helpful Links
Federal Programs, Technical Assistance, and Funding
USA.gov
Search for Programs to Help Youth
How would you like to view the Program Tool?
by Risk Factor
by Protective Factor
by Keyword
All Programs
Programs by Risk Factor
Risk Factors—Individual
Anti-social behavior and alienation/Delinquent beliefs/General delinquency involvement/Drug dealing
Chronic medical and/or physical condition
Cognitive and neurological deficits/Low intelligence quotient/Hyperactivity
Early onset of aggression and/or violence
Early sexual involvement
Favorable attitudes toward drug use/Early onset of AOD use/Alcohol and/or drug use
Programs
Order by:
program name
|
rating
Age Range
Across Ages
Ages 10-12
Adolescent Transitions Program
Ages 11-18
Alcohol Misuse Prevention Study
Ages 10-18
All Children Excel
Ages 6-15
All Stars™
Ages 11-15
Al’s Pals
Ages 3-8
American Indian Life Skills Development
Ages 11-19
Athletes Training and Learning to Avoid Steroids (ATLAS)
Ages 13-19
Be a Star
Ages 5-12
Big Brothers Big Sisters
Ages 6-16
Boys and Girls Club Gang Prevention Through Targeted Outreach
Ages 6-18
Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention of College Students (BASICS)
Ages 18-24
Brief Strategic Family Therapy
Ages 8-18
Broader Urban Involvement and Leadership Development Program (BUILD)
Ages 10-17
CASASTART
Ages 8-13
Club HERO (Helping Everyone Reach Out)
Ages 10-12
Communities Mobilizing for Change on Alcohol
Ages 18-24
Community Trials Intervention to Reduce High-Risk Drinking
Ages 12-54
Creating Lasting Family Connections
Ages 9-17
DARE To Be You
Ages 2-5
Early Risers ‘Skills for Success’ Program
Ages 6-10
East Texas Experiential Learning Center
Ages 12-13
Families in Action
Ages 11-14
Family Effectiveness Training
Ages 6-12
Family Matters
Ages 12-14
Focus on Families
Ages 3-14
Gang Resistance Is Paramount
Ages 7-16
Girls Inc. Friendly PEERsuasion®
Ages 11-14
Girls’ Circle
Ages 9-18
Great Body Shop
Ages 4-14
Growing Healthy
Ages 5-11
Guiding Good Choices
Ages 9-14
HOMEBUILDERS
Ages 0-18
HeadOn
Ages 11-13
I Can Problem Solve
Ages 4-12
Independence Youth Court
Ages 7-16
Keep A Clear Mind
Ages 8-12
Kentucky Adolescent Tobacco Prevention Project
Ages 11-14
Know Your Body
Ages 5-12
LifeSkills® Training
Ages 8-14
Lions-Quest Skills for Adolescence
Ages 10-14
Michigan Model for Comprehensive School Health Education
Ages 5-18
Midwestern Prevention Project
Ages 10-12
Minnesota Smoking Prevention Program
Ages 9-13
Movimiento Ascendencia
Ages 8-19
Multidimensional Family Therapy
Ages 11-18
Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care
Ages 11-18
Multimodal Substance Abuse Prevention
Ages 13-18
Multisystemic Therapy
Ages 12-17
Native American Prevention Project Against AIDS and Substance Abuse
Ages 12-18
Not-On-Tobacco (N–O–T)
Ages 14-19
Nurse–Family Partnership
Ages 0-99
Nurturing Parenting Program
Ages 0-18
Open Circle Curriculum
Ages 5-10
Operation Ceasefire
Ages 15-24
Parenting Partnership
Ages 0-18
Parenting Wisely
Ages 6-18
Parenting With Love and Limits®
Ages 10-18
Parent–Child Assistance Program
Ages 0-3
Positive Action
Ages 5-18
Preventive Alcohol Education Program
Ages 12-17
Project ALERT
Ages 11-14
Project EX
Ages 14-19
Project Link
Ages 15-21
Project Northland—Class Action
Ages 14-18
Project PACE
Ages 9-10
Project Toward No Drug Abuse
Ages 14-19
Protecting You/Protecting Me®
Ages 6-11
Raising a Thinking Child: I Can Problem Solve for Families
Ages 4-7
Residential Student Assistance Program
Ages 14-17
Responding In Peaceful and Positive Ways
Ages 10-14
SISTERS
Ages 0-50
SMART Leaders
Ages 13-17
STARS (Start Taking Alcohol Risks Seriously) for Families
Ages 11-14
STEP (School Transitional Environmental Program)
Ages 12-18
San Diego County Breaking Cycles
Ages 12-17
Saving Lives
Ages 5-35
Say It Straight
Ages 8-18
Schools and Families Educating Children (SAFE Children)
Ages 4-6
Second Step®: A Violence Prevention Curriculum
Ages 4-14
Sembrando Salud
Ages 11-16
Skills, Opportunities, and Recognition (SOAR)
Ages 5-14
Social Competence Promotion Program for Young Adolescents
Ages 11-15
Strengthening Families Program
Ages 3-17
Strengthening Families Program: For Parents and Youth 10–14
Ages 10-14
Strengthening the Bonds of Chicano Youth and Families
Ages 9-16
Supporting Adolescents with Guidance and Employment (SAGE)
Ages 12-16
Teams–Games–Tournaments Alcohol Prevention
Ages 13-17
Teenage Health Teaching Modules
Ages 11-18
Too Good for Drugs
Ages 5-18
Woodrock Youth Development Program
Ages 6-14
Wraparound Milwaukee
Ages 13-17
keepin’ it R.E.A.L. (Refuse, Explain, Avoid, Leave)
Ages 10-17
Gun possession/Illegal gun ownership and/or carrying
Lack of guilt and empathy
Life stressors
Mental disorder/Mental health problem/Conduct disorder
Poor refusal skills
Teen parenthood
Victimization and exposure to violence
Risk Factors—Family
Broken home
Child victimization and maltreatment
Family history of the problem behavior/Parent criminality
Family management problems/Poor parental supervision and/or monitoring
Family transitions
Family violence
Having a young mother
Low parent education level/Illiteracy
Maternal depression
Parental use of physical punishment/Harsh and/or erratic discipline practices
Pattern of high family conflict
Poor family attachment/Bonding
Sibling antisocial behavior
Risk Factors—School
Dropping out of school
Frequent school transitions
Identified as learning disabled
Inadequate school climate/Poorly organized and functioning schools/Negative labeling by teachers
Low academic achievement
Low academic aspirations
Low parent college expectations for child
Negative attitude toward school/Low bonding/Low school attachment/Commitment to school
School suspensions
Truancy/Frequent absences
Risk Factors—Community
Availability of alcohol and other drugs
Availability of firearms
Community crime/High crime neighborhood
Community instability
Economic deprivation/Poverty/Residence in a disadvantaged neighborhood
Feeling unsafe in the neighborhood
Low community attachment
Neighborhood youth in trouble
Social and physical disorder/Disorganized neighborhood
Risk Factors—Peer
Association with delinquent and/or aggressive peers
Gang involvement/Gang membership
Peer alcohol, tobacco, and/or other drug use
Peer rejection