4.2 Article

Predictors of social emotional learning in after-school programming: The impact of relationships, belonging, and program engagement

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY IN THE SCHOOLS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pits.23113

Keywords

after-school youth development; program engagement; SEL; sense of belonging; staff/student relationships

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After-school youth development programs have a positive impact on social-emotional functioning. Staff/student relationships, sense of belonging, and program engagement are predictors of social-emotional functioning. Program engagement plays a significant role in predicting self-management and self-efficacy. These findings have implications for after-school program planning and development.
After-school youth development programs support social-emotional functioning which leads to better academic and behavioral outcomes. This article examines three common predictors of social-emotional functioning individually and concurrently to better understand the role of these predictors in the after-school setting. The common predictors are staff/student relationships, sense of belonging, and program engagement. That data came from 144, 3rd through 8th grade, students across 9 different elementary and middle school sites who regularly attended a large youth development program. Regression analyses were run and the results indicated that each variable was an individually significant predictor of social-emotional functioning. Results from multiple regression analyses demonstrated that there was a better model fit when including all three variables in the same model. Interestingly, the results indicated that program engagement was a strong predictor above and beyond staff/student relationships and sense of belonging on self-management and self-efficacy. Sense of belonging and program engagement both predicted social awareness. Implications of these findings for after-school program planning and development are discussed. Students enjoyment in engaging with programming was the most important predictor of self-efficacy and social awareness within an afterschool youth development program.Positive feelings of belonging and good staff/student relationships, in part, predict healthy social/emotional outcomes.With appropriate funding, afterschool settings are places where relationships, belonging, and engagement influence social-emotional learning (SEL) outcomes and can support the school day SEL curriculum.

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