enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Student leader - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Student_leader

    Through their academic pursuits, students may be able to develop the leadership skills of active listening, collaboration, and problem solving. If given the opportunity to participate in extra-curricular activities, they may then take on more formal leadership roles such as athletic team captains , club leaders, or class presidents.

  3. Youth mentoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youth_mentoring

    Youth mentoring is the process of matching mentors with young people who need or want a caring, responsible adult in their lives. Adult mentors are usually unrelated to the child or teen and work as volunteers through a community-, school-, or church-based social service program.

  4. Peer mentoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_mentoring

    Peer mentoring in education was promoted during the 1960s by educator and theorist Paulo Freire: "The fundamental task of the mentor is a liberatory task. It is not to encourage the mentor's goals and aspirations and dreams to be reproduced in the mentees, the students, but to give rise to the possibility that the students become the owners of their own history.

  5. The importance of youth mentoring - AOL

    www.aol.com/importance-youth-mentoring-115238734...

    The mentor is positive about his experience, he looks forward to the weekly phone calls and the weekend activities, when schedules permit.

  6. Youth leadership - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youth_leadership

    Youth leadership is the practice of teens exercising authority over themselves or others. [ 1 ] Youth leadership has been elaborated upon as a theory of youth development in which young people gain skills and knowledge necessary to lead civic engagement , education reform and community organizing activities.

  7. Mentorship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mentorship

    These mentoring relationships promote career growth and benefit both the mentor and the learner: for example, the mentor can show leadership by teaching; the organization receives an employee that is shaped by the organization's culture and operation because they have been under the mentorship of an experienced member; and the learner can ...

  8. Positive youth development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive_Youth_Development

    Youth participating in Under Pressure, a North American graffiti festival using positive youth development principles. Positive youth development (PYD) programs are designed to optimize youth developmental progress. [1] This is sought through a positivistic approach that emphasizes the inherent potential, strengths, and capabilities youth hold.

  9. Youth empowerment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Youth_empowerment

    Youth empowerment has also been used as a framework to prevent and reduce youth violence. [7] [14] Research shows that these youth empowerment programs can improve conflict avoidance and resolution skills, increase group leadership skills, and civic efficacy [14] and improve ethnic identity and reduce racial conflict. [15]