The Experience of Learning: Early Adolescents in Organized Youth Programs

Although researchers and policymakers have focused on school as the critical place in which learning occurs, organized youth programs offer different environments in which early adolescents can learn. However, early adolescent learning in organized youth programs is an under-researched area of lear...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jennifer A Skuza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mississippi State University 2020-10-01
Series:Journal of Human Sciences and Extension
Subjects:
4-H
Online Access:https://www.jhseonline.com/article/view/1077
id doaj-03bc663eaafb49208e28e29354ff48ef
record_format Article
spelling doaj-03bc663eaafb49208e28e29354ff48ef2020-11-25T03:44:23ZengMississippi State UniversityJournal of Human Sciences and Extension2325-52262020-10-0183The Experience of Learning: Early Adolescents in Organized Youth ProgramsJennifer A Skuza0University of Minnesota Although researchers and policymakers have focused on school as the critical place in which learning occurs, organized youth programs offer different environments in which early adolescents can learn. However, early adolescent learning in organized youth programs is an under-researched area of learning, which may limit the ability of youth development practitioners to respond appropriately to early adolescent learning needs. The purpose of this article is to describe the experience of learning in an organized youth program by finding meaning in early adolescents’ lived experience through a phenomenological methodology. For youth in this study, learning in an organized program is an experience of discovering new ways of seeing themselves and others in their worlds. Learning is comprised of feelings of anxiety that are tempered with the comfort young people find within themselves. Learning is also a relational experience marked by an emerging sense of ownership that shapes one’s sense of self. This study invites youth development practitioners to recognize the significant role they can play in cultivating early adolescent learning       https://www.jhseonline.com/article/view/1077youth learningearly adolescenceyouth developmenteducationphenomenology4-H
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer A Skuza
spellingShingle Jennifer A Skuza
The Experience of Learning: Early Adolescents in Organized Youth Programs
Journal of Human Sciences and Extension
youth learning
early adolescence
youth development
education
phenomenology
4-H
author_facet Jennifer A Skuza
author_sort Jennifer A Skuza
title The Experience of Learning: Early Adolescents in Organized Youth Programs
title_short The Experience of Learning: Early Adolescents in Organized Youth Programs
title_full The Experience of Learning: Early Adolescents in Organized Youth Programs
title_fullStr The Experience of Learning: Early Adolescents in Organized Youth Programs
title_full_unstemmed The Experience of Learning: Early Adolescents in Organized Youth Programs
title_sort experience of learning: early adolescents in organized youth programs
publisher Mississippi State University
series Journal of Human Sciences and Extension
issn 2325-5226
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Although researchers and policymakers have focused on school as the critical place in which learning occurs, organized youth programs offer different environments in which early adolescents can learn. However, early adolescent learning in organized youth programs is an under-researched area of learning, which may limit the ability of youth development practitioners to respond appropriately to early adolescent learning needs. The purpose of this article is to describe the experience of learning in an organized youth program by finding meaning in early adolescents’ lived experience through a phenomenological methodology. For youth in this study, learning in an organized program is an experience of discovering new ways of seeing themselves and others in their worlds. Learning is comprised of feelings of anxiety that are tempered with the comfort young people find within themselves. Learning is also a relational experience marked by an emerging sense of ownership that shapes one’s sense of self. This study invites youth development practitioners to recognize the significant role they can play in cultivating early adolescent learning      
topic youth learning
early adolescence
youth development
education
phenomenology
4-H
url https://www.jhseonline.com/article/view/1077
work_keys_str_mv AT jenniferaskuza theexperienceoflearningearlyadolescentsinorganizedyouthprograms
AT jenniferaskuza experienceoflearningearlyadolescentsinorganizedyouthprograms
_version_ 1724515344777740288