Abstract
A major vehicle for the practice of community psychology is through the organization of community-based activities. My colleagues and I have developed many programs for community learning centers, in-school and after school programs, and community technology centers. In the last 10 years, 30,000 people (mostly children) have participated in activities designed for enjoyment and learning, with a view to adding protective factors and reducing negative factors in at-risk communities. Development of these programs for literacy, education, life and work skills, has increasingly followed a community responsive model. Within each program, we created explicit images of future success. That is, people could see themselves being successful where they normally fail: self modeling with feedforward. Data reports show that individuals generalized and maintained their new skills and attitudes, but the sustainability of programs has been variable. Analysis of the variations indicates the importance of program level feedforward that brings the future into the present. The discussion includes consideration of how individual-level and community-level practices can inform each other.
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Aspects of this article have been presented at the 10th Trans-Tasman Community Psychology Conference, Sydney, April 2006, and in an invited address at the 114th annual convention of the American Psychological Association, New Orleans, August 2006. Partial support in the preparation of this paper was provided by mutliple grants from the US Department of Education, although no endorsement is implied.
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Dowrick, P.W. Community-driven learning activities, creating futures: 30,000 people can’t be wrong—Can they?. Am J Community Psychol 39, 13–19 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10464-007-9089-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10464-007-9089-0