Georgia Hall
Wellesley College
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Childhood obesity | 2012
Jean L. Wiecha; Georgia Hall; Ellen Gannett; Barbara A. Roth
BACKGROUND Out-of-school time (OST) programs serve over 8 million children per year and have ample opportunity to promote health through menu and physical activity choices. Until recently, however, the field has lacked a comprehensive set of operationalizable standards for healthy eating and physical activity. The National AfterSchool Association adopted voluntary healthy eating and physical activity quality standards (HEPAQS) in April, 2011. METHODS We describe the development of HEPAQS. This work reflects a social ecological model for changing childrens eating and activity behaviors through program-level interventions. The standards were developed using a national, mixed-methods needs assessment, review of existing standards and expert recommendations, and a participatory process of discussion, review, and consensus engaging 19 influential service and policy organizations and agencies in the Healthy Out-of-School Time (HOST) coalition, which we convened in 2009. RESULTS The HOST coalition approved a final version of the HEPAQS in January, 2011. The 11 standards address content, curriculum selection, staff training, program support, and environmental support for healthy eating and physical activity. In April, 2011, the HEPAQS were adopted by the National AfterSchool Association, and have subsequently been widely disseminated. Extensive adoption and implementation efforts are underway. CONCLUSIONS The availability of a comprehensive set of standards for healthy eating and physical activity in OST provides practical information to help community-based youth-serving organizations participate in obesity and chronic disease prevention. A working awareness of their content will be useful to scientists undertaking health promotion studies in the out-of-school time setting.
Archive | 2017
Georgia Hall; Kristen Fay Poston; Julie Dennehy
Given the substantial data that support trends in summer learning loss, researchers have concluded that summertime presents a particularly potent opportunity to help youth learn and develop in significant ways that have been vastly underestimated. Unfortunately, the socioeconomic divide keeps many children out of summer learning programs, meaning that those youth who may most benefit from opportunities to prevent summer learning loss may be least likely to participate in summer learning programs. This chapter examines the strengths and contributions of summer learning programs, along with identifying implementation challenges and gaps in our knowledge base. First, we provide an overview of the components of high quality summer learning programs. Then we address the connection between summer learning programs and youth outcomes and discuss several conceptual and methodological limitations in our understanding of associations between summer learning experiences and youth outcomes. Finally, we consider the role of summer learning in the larger picture of education reform and youth development priorities.
New Directions for Youth Development | 2011
Linda Charmaraman; Georgia Hall
Out-of-school-time programs, especially arts-based programs, can be critical players in a communitys efforts to prevent school dropout. This research review suggests the following approaches for arts-based programs: (1) recruitment and retention of target populations with multiple risk factors; (2) long-term skill development that engages youth behaviorally, emotionally, and academically rather than a drop-in culture; (3) an emphasis on the critical ingredient of real-world applications through performance; (4) staff development and mentoring; (5) a strategic community-level plan for dropout prevention; (6) and program content reframed toward competencies that underlie better school performance and prosocial behavior, such as communication, initiative, problem solving, motivation, and self-efficacy.
Preventive Medicine | 2014
Jean Wiecha; Michael W. Beets; Natalie Colabianchi; Anne Ferree; Georgia Hall; Jennifer Hofman; Amy Rauworth
This commentary describes physical activity standards for Out-of-School Time programs and argues that their widespread adoption presents important opportunities for research on their implementation and impact.
Preventing Chronic Disease | 2018
Jean Wiecha; Pamela A. Williams; Kristen C. Giombi; Amanda Richer; Georgia Hall
Introduction Most children underconsume fruit and vegetables. This study estimated the frequency and quality of fruit and vegetables offered during snack in US afterschool programs and examined program-level factors associated with offering them, including awareness and use of the National AfterSchool Association Healthy Eating and Physical Activity standards. Methods We conducted descriptive analyses and regression modeling by using data collected from 684 National AfterSchool Association members and their colleagues via a 2015 online survey. Results At the previous snack, 63% of respondents offered fruit, a vegetable, or both, with 42% offering only fruit, 18% offering fruit and vegetables, and 3% offering only vegetables. The quality of the items offered showed that most respondents selected the healthiest options, such as fresh fruit and vegetables. Controlling for other factors, we found that factors independently associated with offering fruit, vegetables, or both were membership in the National AfterSchool Association, using the standards for menu planning, and training staff members in healthy eating more than once a year. Programs run by school districts were less likely to offer fruit than programs run by other organizations. Conclusion Membership in the National AfterSchool Association and use of its Healthy Eating and Physical Activity standards are associated with offering fruit and vegetables during snack at afterschool programs staffed by National AfterSchool Association members and their colleagues across the United States. With over a third of sites surveyed offering neither a fruit nor a vegetable at the previous snack, additional implementation of the standards is still needed.
Translational behavioral medicine | 2017
Amy M. Bohnert; Nicole Zarrett; Michael W. Beets; Georgia Hall; Joanna Buscemi; Amy Heard; Russell R. Pate
The Society of Behavioral Medicine recommends adoption of policies at the district, state, and federal levels that minimize weight gain among youth over the summertime, particularly among low-income, minority school-age youth who appear to be at greater risk. Policies that facilitate (1) partnerships between school districts and community organizations to provide affordable summertime programming, (2) strategic efforts by schools and communities to encourage families to enroll and attend summertime programming via the creation of community-wide summertime offerings offices, (3) adoption of joint-use/shared use agreements in communities to promote use of indoor and outdoor school facilities to provide affordable programming during the summer months, and (4) implementation of strategies that help summer programs achieve the Healthy Eating and Physical Activity (HEPA) standards which have been endorsed by the Healthy Out-of-School Time (HOST) coalition. Research is needed to elucidate key mechanisms by which involvement in structured programming may reduce weight gain over the summer months.
Journal of Vocational Behavior | 2007
Anne E. Noonan; Georgia Hall; David L. Blustein
New Directions for Youth Development | 2006
Georgia Hall
Preventive Medicine | 2014
Jean Wiecha; Georgia Hall; Michelle Barnes
Journal of Youth Development | 2015
Georgia Hall; Michelle V. Porche; Jennifer M. Grossman; Sviatlana Smashnaya