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Social and Emotional Development in Children and Adolescents
Knowledge Path

Introduction

This knowledge path directs readers to a selection of current, high-quality resources about promoting healthy social and emotional development in children and adolescents. Resources tap into the health, education, and social services literature. Separate sections present resources by age group and cover topics such as developmental stages; factors that impact social and emotional development; policies and programs to promote social and emotional well-being in homes and community settings; and strategies for integrating health, developmental, and educational services. This knowledge path is aimed at health professionals, program administrators, policymakers, and community advocates. Separate briefs present resources for families and schools. This knowledge path has been developed by the MCH Library at Georgetown University and will be updated periodically.

Overview

See the Bright Futures materials, What to Expect and When to Seek Help: Bright Futures Developmental Tools for Families and Providers (2006). This set of four tools in English and Spanish aims to help professionals and families begin important conversations together on how best to support the social and emotional development of infants, children, and adolescents.

Resources for Professionals

General Resources

Websites
Additional Electronic Resources

Infants and Young Children

This section presents resources that address scientific research about early child development; early childhood social, emotional, and communication milestones; developmental screening; early literacy and school readiness; strategies for integrating health, developmental, and educational services for young children and families; and state policy approaches for promoting early childhood care and education.

Websites
Additional Electronic Resources

School-Age Children

This section presents resources about promoting the social and emotional development of school-age children and includes resources that address social and emotional learning as part of school and after-school programs. Several resources are applicable to adolescents, as well.

Websites
Additional Electronic Resources

Adolescents

This section presents resources that address scientific research about adolescent development; interdisciplinary models of physical and behavioral health care for adolescents; and approaches for developing, supporting, and sustaining youth development programs. Several resources are applicable to school-age children, as well.

Websites
  • Building Partnerships for Youth. A framework that describes the 21 essential elements of child and adolescent development, strategies for promoting positive child and adolescent development, a database of evaluated child and adolescent development programs, a program assessment tool, and training tools, fact sheets, and other resources. Building Partnerships for Youth is a partnership between the National 4-H Council and the University of Arizona.

  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC): Healthy Youth! Adolescent Health. Information about societal influences on adolescents and the critical types of adolescent health behavior that contribute markedly to the leading causes of death, disability, and social problems among adolescents and adults in the United States. Publications include science-based strategies to improve adolescent health and well-being and

    School Connectedness: Strategies for Increasing Protective Factors Among Youth. (2009). [Guide, fact sheets].

    Guide to Community Preventive Services: Adolescent Health. Recommendations for population-based interventions that focus on adolescent alcohol and drug use, violence, and sexual behaviors.

    Also see the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS).

  • Finance Project: Information Resource Center. Access to a wealth of information on policies, programs, and financing strategies for initiatives striving to improve the lives of children, families and communities. Resources focus on promising practices, guides to federal funding, out-of-school time, supporting and sustaining adolescent programs, and adolescents who are transitioning out of foster care. The Finance Project is a nonprofit firm that helps leaders make smart investment decisions, develop sound financing strategies, and build solid partnerships that benefit children, families, and communities.

  • FindYouthInfo.gov. Program and funding information and resources to help youth-serving organizations and community partnerships plan, implement, and participate in effective programs for children and adolescents. Topics include positive child and adolescent development, bullying, after-school programs, and transition-age adolescents. FindYouthInfo.gov was created by the Interagency Working Group on Youth Programs, which is composed of representatives from 12 federal agencies that support programs and services focusing on children and adolescents. See the FindYouthInfo.gov directory of evidence-based programs.

  • Forum for Youth Investment. Issue briefs, webinars, articles, and news about efforts to improve education, out-of-school time, adolescent development, and policy and planning to ensure that adolescents have the supports, opportunities, and services needed to prosper and contribute where they live, learn, work, and play. The forum is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to helping communities and the nation make sure all adolescents are ready for college, work, and life. Initiatives include

    Ready by 21: All Youth Ready for College, Work, and Life. A framework for child and adolescent-focused planning and decision-making and tools to help change makers—from parents to program directors to policy makers—optimize resources and streamline strategies to improve outcomes for infants, children, and adolescents.

  • National Adolescent Health Information Center (NAHIC). Fact sheets, policy briefs, reports, and other materials about adolescent health on topics that include positive adolescent development, particularly for adolescent males. NAHIC is based at the University of California, San Francisco.

  • National Alliance to Advance Adolescent Health. Fact sheets, issue briefs, reports, and journal article citations about health care topics important to adolescents, such as health insurance and access to care; development of adolescent-friendly, interdisciplinary models of care; and assurance of confidential care. The alliance provides education, research, policy analysis, and technical assistance to support improvements in the way that adolescent health care is structured and financed.

    Concern for Our Teens: Opinion Leaders Speak Out on Adolescent Health. (2010). [Report].

  • National Clearinghouse on Families and Youth (NCFY): Positive Youth Development. Program development and funding information, publications, an online training module, news, and podcasts about positive adolescent development. NCFY is funded by the Family and Youth Services Bureau (FYSB).

    Also see the NCFY Literature Database.

  • Note: Several resources in the School-Age Children section are applicable to adolescents.
Additional Electronic Resources

Databases

The databases listed below are excellent tools for identifying data, additional literature and research, and programs about promoting social and emotional development in children and adolescents. Many of the entries below contain tips on how to use the databases efficiently. Please note that databases vary in how terms should be entered; for example, some require quotation marks and others don't. Enter search phrases as shown in bold below.

Data
  • ChildStats.gov. Indicators of infant, child, and adolescent well-being, including family and social environment, economic circumstances, health care, physical environment and safety, behavior, education, and health. ChildStats.gov is a service of the Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics. The Forum's annual report, America's Children in Brief: Key National Indicators of Well-Being, details the status of children and families in the United States.

  • Child Trends DataBank. Over 100 key indicators of infant, child, and adolescent well-being on topics ranging from after-school activities to well-child visits. The DataBank also contains information about the types of programs and interventions that may influence particular outcomes for child and adolescent well-being.

  • Data Resource Center for Child and Adolescent Health (DRC). Data from the National Survey of Children's Health, 2003 and 2007, and the National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs, 2001 and 2005/2006. Users can search and compare results on over 100 indicators of child health and well-being; view state and regional profiles on key measures; and compare findings at all levels for children by age, race and ethnicity, income, or health status. Emotional and mental health, community and school activities, family health and activities, and neighborhood safety and support are among the health indicators addressed. DRC is a project of the Child and Adolescent Health Measurement Initiative (CAHMI).

  • KIDS COUNT Data Center. National, state, city, and community data on more than 100 indicators of infant, child, and adolescent well-being, including economic status, health, safety, and risk factors. Generate custom graphs, maps, ranked lists, and state-by-state profiles. KIDS COUNT is a project of the Annie E. Casey Foundation.

  • National Center for Children in Poverty (NCCP): Data Tools. National- and state-level statistics about children from families with low incomes on topics such as parental education, parental employment, marital status, and race/ethnicity. Information about state and federal policies that assist families with low incomes. A Basic Needs Budget Calculator to determine how much a family needs to make ends meet. A Family Resource Simulator to determine the impact of federal and state "work support" benefits on the budgets of low- to moderate-income families. An Income Converter to convert values among federal poverty guidelines, state median income, and annual income (in dollars).

  • Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS): Youth Online. View national, state, and local data about health-risk behaviors that contribute markedly to the leading causes of death, disability, and social problems among adolescents and adults in the United States. View data about high school and middle school students by location (United States, state/territory, or local) and health topic (unintentional injuries and violence, tobacco use, alcohol and other drug use, sexual behaviors, dietary behaviors, physical activity, and asthma). Youth Online is a service of CDC's Division of Adolescent and School Health (DASH).

  • Also see the Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) chartbooks, the State of America's Children 2010, the Child and Youth Well-Being Index (CWI), and Child Care and Early Education Research Connections.
Literature and Research Databases
Programs Databases

Resources for Families

Resources for Schools

Related MCH Library Resources

Social and Emotional Development in Children and Adolescents: Knowledge Path, 2nd ed. (May 2011). (Updated: October 2011).
Author: Susan Brune Lorenzo, M.L.S., MCH Library.
Reviewers: Lauren Agoratus, M.A., Family Voices and Family-to-Family Health Information Resource Center at the Statewide Parent Advocacy Network of N.J.; Robin L. Harwood, Ph.D., Maternal and Child Health Bureau; Keri Linas, Ph.D., Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development; Olivia Pickett, M.A., M.L.S., MCH Library; Judi Siegel, L.I.C.S.W., Children's Hospital Boston.
Editor: Ruth Barzel, M.A., MCH Library.

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