A r c h i v e d  I n f o r m a t i o n

Office of the Under Secretary
Executive Summary

When Schools Stay Open Late:
The National Evaluation of the 21st-Century Community Learning Centers Program

Summary of First Year Findings

In an era when most parents work, many Americans want their children to have access to safe and supervised after-school activities that can help develop academic, personal, and social skills. In 1994, Congress authorized the 21st-Century Community Learning Centers (21st-Century) program to open up schools for broader use by their communities. In 1998, the program was refocused on supporting schools to provide school-based academic and recreational activities after school and during other times when schools were not in regular session, such as on weekends, holidays, and during summers. As an after-school program, 21st-Century grew quickly from an appropriation of $40 million in fiscal year 1998 to $1 billion in fiscal year 2002. It now supports after-school programs in about 7,500 rural and inner-city public schools in more than 1,400 communities. Programs operate in public school buildings and offer academic, recreational, and cultural activities during after-school hours. A distinguishing characteristic of 21st-Century programs is the inclusion of academic activities. Grants made after April 1998 included a requirement that programs include academic activities.

This study, conducted for the U.S. Department of Education with support for additional data collection and analysis from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, presents the first-year findings of the largest and most rigorous examination to date of school-based after-school programs.1 The study was designed to examine the characteristics and outcomes of typical programs and did not attempt to define or identify the characteristics of the best programs. Programs selected to be in the study operated in elementary and middle schools. Some were in their second year of funding when the study began collecting data and others were in their third year of funding. Most grantees that were part of the study had operated some type of after-school program before receiving a 21st-Century grant and were using their grant funds to expand or modify their services and activities. About 65 percent of middle school grantees and about 57 percent of elementary school grantees in the study had operated after-school programs in one or more schools that were part of the 21st-Century grant.

The study currently is collecting another year of follow-up data and has expanded to include more programs serving elementary school students. The additional data from the second follow- up year and from the newly included programs will be the basis for two future reports. The first will update the findings for middle school students using another year of follow-up data and will present first year findings for elementary school students using a larger number of elementary school programs. The second will update the findings for elementary school students using another year of follow-up data.

Key Impact Findings

The first-year findings reveal that while 21st-Century after-school centers changed where and with whom students spent some of their after-school time and increased parental involvement, they had limited influence on academic performance, no influence on feelings of safety or on the number of "latchkey" children and some negative influences on behavior.2 In brief, the key findings are:

Key Implementation Findings

The first-year findings indicate that grantees generally had succeeded in implementing their planned programs and in gaining support from and creating working relationships with school principals and teachers. Most programs provided academic, enrichment, and recreation activities, with homework help being the most common academic activity. The mix across the three activity areas varied according to locally determined needs and preferences. A few programs focused only on providing academic activities, but none focused only on providing recreational activities. The federal grant and other funding sources enabled programs to spend about $1,000 for each student enrolled during the school year, equivalent to about a 16 percent increase in education spending. Other implementation findings include:

Overall, the findings suggest that policymakers and program developers need to consider ways to address low student participation and low academic content. Considering program structures that would facilitate more frequent attendance, such as focusing on serving students having difficulty in reading or math and asking them to participate a minimum number of days each week, may be worth considering. Efforts to increase the academic content and quality of activities also may be fruitful. Especially for middle school students, the challenge will be how to both attract students and help students improve their academic performance.

Methodology

While research has evaluated other after-school programs, this study--conducted by Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. (MPR) and its partner, Decision Information Resources, Inc.--is one of the few that is consistent with the principles of scientifically based research set out in the recent No Child Left Behind Act. The study is unique in the large number of after-school programs that were included and in its application of rigorous techniques for measuring impacts.

The evaluation's design includes a middle school study and an elementary school study. The middle school study is based on a nationally representative sample of after-school programs and participants and a matched comparison group of students which is similar to the program participant group. Similar students were identified in host schools or in other schools in the participating districts. Thirty-four school districts and 62 centers in the districts are included in the study.

The elementary school study uses random assignment of students to treatment and control groups. The study involved 14 school districts and 34 centers. Results presented here are from seven school districts selected in the first year of the study; another seven school districts were added in the second year of the study and data currently are being collected in these districts. The elementary school programs that were part of the study appear to be typical of elementary school 21st-Century programs along most dimensions (although they tended to be more urban and served a larger percentage of minority students than the average elementary program). However, caution should be exercised in applying the findings to all elementary school programs. Programs in the study had more applicants for their slots than they could serve, which facilitated the use of an experimental design, but the programs were not statistically sampled.

The findings presented in this report are based on one year of data collected in school year 2000-2001 from students, parents, teachers, principals, program staff members, and school records. Evaluators collected baseline and follow-up data for 4,400 middle school students and 1,000 elementary school students, and conducted site visits, lasting between two and four days, to all grantees at least once. MPR is continuing to study the programs and will prepare two additional reports based on another year of follow-up data and another round of visits to each program.

General Information about 21st-Century Programs

Annual performance reports submitted by grantees to the U.S. Department of Education indicate general characteristics and context of 21st-Century programs. The reports also are informative about centers in the study. Nationwide, the average grantee ran three or four centers that together reported enrollment of almost 700 students over the course of the school year. Attendance varied by day, with some students attending regularly and others more occasionally, and with students enrolling and exiting from the program at different points during the year. Fifty-seven percent were minority students, compared with 37 percent of students nationwide. Most centers (95 percent) were located in elementary or middle schools or located in schools that included some combination of K-8. Typically, centers were open 10 or more hours a week, after school, and a third were open 20 hours or more a week. Some were open on Saturdays, and many offered summer programs. Sixty-six percent of host schools were considered high-poverty (at least half their students were eligible for free or reduced-price lunches). Nationally, 17 percent of schools are high-poverty. Center budgets averaged about $196,000 a center, or about $1,000 per enrolled student, with the 21st-Century grant accounting for about 70 percent of budgets. Programs typically were free both for students and parents.

The rest of this summary looks at findings for middle school programs, then at findings for elementary school programs. These findings are based on the various samples that were drawn by this study. We present the findings for middle and elementary schools separately because of differences in how the programs were selected for the evaluation and how impacts were measured.

Findings for Middle School Programs

Middle school centers in the study usually offered the following activities:

Characteristics of Staff in Middle School Centers

SOURCE: Survey of program staff for grantees in the national evaluation. Staff in the elementary school centers that were part of the national evaluation had similar characteristics.

Management and Staffing

Officials from the host school or district oversaw most middle school programs. Program directors usually had supervisory and administrative roles, while program coordinators handled day-to-day details of the centers, such as recruitment, scheduling, staffing, parent and community outreach, and attendance monitoring. Nearly all other staff members were directly involved in student activities or instruction and spent most of their time working with students. Survey data showed that middle school teachers believed that, as a result of working with students at the centers, they improved their teaching skills and had better relationships with some students.

Student Participation

Bar chart showing middle school student attendance at centers; 9.8% attended from 76 to 150 days, 12.5% attended from 51 to 75 days, 24.2% attended from 26 to 50 days, and 53.6% attended less than 26 days Middle school students in the study attended centers for 32 days-- about one day a week--during the 2000-2001 school year. More than half attended for fewer than 25 days, a quarter attended for more than 50 days, and almost 10 percent attended for more than 75 days (see box). Program staff attributed the low attendance to the lack of interesting or appealing activities and to competition from other organized activities, especially sports. Center policies also made it easy not to attend--many allowed students to participate on a drop-in basis, choosing each day whether or not to participate.

Not all students chose to participate in 21st-Century programs. Students who had chosen not to participate (surveyed in six selected programs) said that they would rather "hang out" after school, were involved in other organized activities after school, or were not interested in the activities. Almost half of the students thought the centers were "mostly a place kids go when their parents are at work," and a quarter considered them "just for kids who need help in school." Participants who had stopped attending echoed these sentiments.


A Typical Middle School Center

The center is open four days a week for two and a half hours a day. About 60 students participate on a given day. Activities begin with a homework session at 2:30 p.m., when the regular school day ends. Homework sessions are held in regular classrooms in one wing of the school. To participate in other recreational and enrichment activities, students must attend the homework sessions. In these sessions, students eat a snack provided by the program and work on their assignments. Each session has about 15 students and a teacher. Homework time ends at 3:45 p.m., and students then participate in a mix of recreational and enrichment activities. The center's activities include table tennis, Pep Club, tennis, golf, and board games. Enrichment activities include classes in martial arts, cooking, and choral music. Some activities, such as martial arts classes, are popular and are scheduled throughout the year. Others, such as cooking, change every 12 weeks to reflect changing student interest. The center's activities end at 5 p.m. and students go home on school buses.

Learning Outcomes

The objective of improving learning outcomes distinguished 21st-Century after-school programs, and more than 75 percent of parents of participants said they believed participation would help their child do better in school. However, participants were just as likely as comparison group students to complete homework, although they were more likely to do so to their teachers' satisfaction, and participants had about the same English, science, and social studies or history grades as similar students. Participants had slightly higher math grades (see box below), and slightly higher school attendance.

Additional Analyses and Other Outcomes

The evidence on the effect of programs on student effort in school is mixed. According to teachers, program students were more likely than similar students to try hard in reading or English class, be attentive in class, and participate and volunteer in class. However, teachers also report similar rates of frequent homework completion for program participant and nonparticipants. In addition, program participants report spending a similar number of hours watching TV.

Another program objective was to reduce students' exposure to unsafe settings. However, programs did not increase the extent to which students felt safer after school, and, although rates were not high, participants were more likely to report that they sold drugs, smoked marijuana, and, especially for girls, had their personal property damaged or were "picked on." Other measures of behavior--such as suspensions, absences, and teacher reports of discipline problems--were the same in both groups.

In general, program participation did not change students' interpersonal skills. Program students were no more likely to report getting along with others their age, feeling included, being good at working with others in a team, or setting a goal and working to achieve it. In fact, middle school participants were less likely their nonparticipant peers to rate themselves as good or excellent at working out conflicts with others.

Bar chart showing selected impacts of 21st-Century Centers for middle school students; showing no significant difference between participants and similar students for English Grade (80.9 for each), percent who often or always do assigned homework (83.4 for each), percent who feel very safe after school (60.5 for participants, 62.1 for similar students), and percent in self-care (17.5 for participants, 17.3 for similar students), statistically significant difference at the 5% level for Math Grade (80.3 for participants, 79.5 for similar students), and statistically significant difference at the 10% level for the percent who had property damaged on purpose (16.9 for participants, 14.1 for similar students) and percent who sold illegal drugs (3.3 for participants, 1.8 for similar students)

NOTE: Reported impacts were estimated using regression models to adjust for baseline differences between program participants and the similar students. The adjustment variables in the regression models included student demographic characteristics, household socioeconomic status, and students' baseline test scores, attendance, disciplinary problems, and self-reported grades.

Impacts by program characteristics were also estimated. These analyses focused on two types of program characteristics: (1) program emphasis on academics and (2) levels of participant attendance. Interestingly, programs that emphasized academic activities over recreation and other activities were not more likely to increase test scores or grades. Similarly, no relationship is evident between average attendance of a program and impacts by program.

Additional analysis looked at the impacts for frequent participants compared to infrequent participants. The analysis suggests that frequent participants were more likely to be from disadvantaged households and to want to improve in school, as their better behavior in school and their more frequent attendance itself indicate. However, the analysis did not reveal that more frequent participation led to better outcomes.

Findings for Elementary School Programs

Researchers selected elementary school centers that had more applicants than they could accept, because these centers could implement experimental designs. Elementary school programs in the study were more likely to be in urban areas and to serve more disadvantaged students than other elementary school programs, but most characteristics were similar to other elementary school programs.

Bar chart showing elementary school student attendance at centers; 16.9% attended from 101 to 150 days, 21.7% attended from 76 to 100 days, 14.6% attended from 51 to 75 days, 19.8% attended from 26 to 50 days, and 27.0% attended less than 26 days Elementary school students attended for 58 days, on average, during the school year, and more than one-third of students attended for more than 75 days. These attendance levels may not be typical of attendance levels of elementary school programs in general because the evaluation looked only at oversubscribed programs.

The elementary school programs in the study increased the time students spent at school or outside the home and reduced the time spent at home after school cared for by a parent or sibling. Programs did not reduce self-care, the incidence of which was low (about two percent of students).

The programs had no effects on reading or math grades or reading test scores. For example, in spring 2001, program students had an average percentile reading score of 34.3, compared with a score of 34.1 for similar students. Social studies grades were higher by a statistically significant margin (83, compared with 80), but grades in other subjects were not.

Programs did not appear to improve student effort in school. Parents and teachers had different views about whether effort improved. According to teachers, program students were more likely than similar students to try hard in reading or English class. According to parents, however, program students were less likely than similar students to work hard in school. However, students reported no differences in homework completion, time spent watching television, or time spent reading for fun.

Bar chart showing selected impacts of 21st-Century Centers for elementary school students; showing no significant difference between participants and similar students for Reading Test Score (34.3 for participants, 34.1 for similar students), Reading Grade (82.6 for participants, 81.7 for similar students), Math Grade (81.0 for participants, 79.6 for similar students), percent who often or always do assigned homework (85.0 for participants, 86.6 for similar students), percent who feel very safe after school (74.3 for participants, 75.5 for similar students) and percent in self-care (1.6 for participants, 2.2 for similar students), and statistically significant difference at the 5% level for Social Studies Grade (83.0 for participants, 80.0 for similar students)

NOTE: Impacts were estimated using regression models to adjust for differences between treatment group and control groups in fall 2000. The adjustment variables in the regression included indicators of students' demographic characteristics, household socioeconomic status, and students' fall test scores, as well as previous year attendance, disciplinary problems, and self-reported grades.

Programs did not affect whether students felt safe or unsafe after school and did not affect student behavior in school. Suspensions, absences, and teacher reports of discipline problems were the same for both groups.

Program participation did not change students' interpersonal skills. Program students were no more likely to report getting along with others their age, feeling included, being good at working with others in a team, or setting a goal and working to achieve it.


A Typical Elementary School Center

The center is open five days a week for two and a half hours a day. About 80 students participate every day, with most participating three or four times a week. After the school day ends, students have a snack provided by the program and play outside for 30 minutes. At 2:30 p.m., third-, fourth-, and fifth-grade students participate in a homework session. Kindergarten, first-, and second-grade students have "story time." To participate in other recreational and enrichment activities, students must attend the homework session (or story time). In the homework session, students work on assignments or read a book if they have completed their homework. Each homework classroom has about 20 students, two at a table, and a college student or paraprofessional. At 3:30 p.m., homework and story time end, and recreational and enrichment activities begin. All students participate in two 45-minute electives. Recreational activities include arts and crafts, games, computers, and team sports. Enrichment activities include music, drama, and dance. Homework assistance and access to computers are provided throughout the year. Other electives change quarterly based on student interest. At 5 p.m., the second elective ends, and students gather in the school library to be picked up by school buses. If they have parental permission, some older students walk home after signing out.

Directions for the Future

These findings reflect the challenges school-based after-school programs face to improve student outcomes. Even for after-school programs oriented toward providing academic support as well as recreational and social activities, there were few improvements in homework completion, grades, and test scores. The lack of academic improvement may be due to the low attendance rates and the length of the follow-up period. However, analyses of those who participate more frequently found that more attendance alone may not make measurable differences in outcomes. In addition, too few participants may have received sustained, substantive academic support. Both participation rates and the content of program academic offerings may need more attention.

The No Child Left Behind Act restructures the 21st-Century program and focuses more attention on the program's potential for improving academic outcomes, especially for disadvantaged students. An additional year of follow-up and the expansion of the number of elementary school programs in the study will provide another opportunity to assess whether the programs (as they are currently implemented) are likely to meet these objectives.


1 This study focuses on school-based programs that are part of the 21st-Century program. Results do not extrapolate to all after-school programs in general.

2 A "center" refers to after-school services operated in one school, and a "program" refers to one or more centers operated in one school district. The study measured impacts at the program level but not at the center level.


[Return to Contents]
This page last modified--December 31, 2002 (jer)