The Center for Youth Development and Policy Research was established at the
Academy for Educational Development in 1990 in response to a compelling need to
define and promote national and community strategies for positive youth
development. The chief goal of the Center is to work in partnership with
individuals, organizations, government, and community leadership to create and
advance a vision of youth development that specifies both strategies and
outcomes.
Over the past five years, the Center has pursued these efforts in partnership
with a variety of communities including Columbus, Indiana; Kansas City,
Missouri; Westchester County, New York; Portland, Oregon; Minneapolis,
Minnesota; New York City; Chicago, Illinois; Los Angeles and San Francisco,
California; Boston, Massachusetts; Pinellas County, Florida; Washington, DC;
Baltimore, Maryland; and Albuquerque, New Mexico. The Center has also worked
in varying degrees of partnership with a number of national organizations
including the National League of Cities; the Coalition of Community Foundations
for Youth; the National Urban League; the National Network for Youth; the
National 4-H Council; and the United Way.
One of these successful efforts has been Community Youth Mapping. Community
Youth Mapping is young people locating and documenting information about
"places to go and things to do." It involves young people going block by block
to canvass their neighborhoods in search of programs, services, places,
opportunities and caring adults available to them, their families and their
peers. Upon identifying these resources, they will be entered into a computer
system that will make the data available in user-friendly ways.
Ironically, even though the Community Youth Mapping process is quite simple,
most communities do not have accurate and timely information about existing
positive resources for youth. A community that has successfully identified and
mapped its youth resources can then conduct informed and strategic community
planning, while at the same time empowering and involving young people in their
communities development.
What you have in front of you is a framework that briefly discusses the ten
steps of effectively, efficiently and accurately mapping community resources
for youth. This is a framework not a roadmap. Its purpose is to identify the
key steps in the Community Youth Mapping process. Since no two communities are
the same, we do not prescribe a timetable. How a community gets to each step
and the time it takes to get through the steps is determined by the community.
Even though you have all this flexibility and empowerment, if you intend to
accomplish the primary goal of Community YouthMapping®, there must be one areas
of rigidity: each step
must be reached.
The primary goal of mapping community resources for youth is simple and
direct: to identify all of the resources that are available to young people in
their community. Given this primary goal, the Center's experience in mapping
youth resources in communities and cities has lead us to believe in this area
of rigidity.
Having said all that, it is important to remember that this is a local effort.
Although, Community YouthMapping® is being done throughout the country, no two
efforts are the same. The Center is cognizant of these uniquenesses and prefers
to use other Community YouthMapping® efforts as references not roadmaps.
We are well aware of the growing interest in community asset mapping. There are
books and surveys that speak much about community asset mapping. There have
been many questions about the ways in which we differ from what is being
described in the existing literature. Succinctly, we feel that Community
YouthMapping® is Community Asset Mapping 101. We believe that CCommunity
YouthMapping®is a pre-requisite to Community Asset Mapping. CyCommunity
YouthMapping®s young people documenting their community through their eyes and
with their feet. The information gathered and analyzed by young people is
needed before mapping an entire community or developing relationships with its
assets (resources) for the purpose of building the community from the inside
out. We are not an alternative to the existing community asset mapping efforts
or literature, rather CymCommunity YouthMapping® a foundation built by youth
upon which effective and efficient community asset mapping can be built.
Step 1: Identify Convening Organization
Step 2: Formation of a Public/Private/NNonprofitCommunity Advisory Board
Step 3: Designation of Lead Agency
Step 4: Definition of What "Community" Means
Step 5: Recruitment of the Mapping Team
Step 6: Development of the Mapping Protocol
Step 7: Training of Mapping Team
Step 8: Mapping - The Field Work
Step 9: Analysis of Mapping Results
Step 10: Reporting and Using the Findings
Ten steps.
Just ten steps to accomplish one of the most significant efforts a community
can do with and for its young people. Once a community has decided that they
indeed do want to map their community with proven tools and experienced
partners, the Center will provide as much technical assistance and support as
needed.
As mentioned earlier, as important as Community YouthMapping® is to a
community, it is only a beginning. The initiatives and programs that can be
accomplished with information is unlimited.
Finally, the affect this process has on the young people who map their
community is invaluable. Community YouthMapping® empowers and mobilizes them in
such a positive and powerful manner that is difficult to replicate through
other efforts. Harness and engage this energy toward positive programs and
services and your community will be well on its way to building itself from
within with the untapped potential of its youth.
Academy for Educational Development
It is important to understand that
resources are not always located in formal programs.
Resources for young people can be found anywhere — in agencies,
organizations, businesses, in the neighborhood, around the corner and down the
road. The mapping team should keep this principle in mind while planning the
mapping activity because it will prevent them from focusing solely on programs.
The first step in beginning the Community YouthMapping® process is to identify
an organization within the community that will convene a group of public and
private community representatives to determine the level of interest in having
young people map a community. This convening organization will host the
Center's staff. The Center will make a presentation about Community
YouthMapping®and answer questions about the process and level of involvement
required.
The first task of the Lead Agency is to create a governing body in the form of
a Community Advisory Board. The Community Advisory Board's role is to help
support, promote, plan and implement community mapping activities. This
advisory board should be composed of a mix of public, private and nonprofit
leaders. The Advisory Board should not be larger than 15 members.
The convening organization may or may not be the Lead Agency. One outcome of
the presentation meeting is to identify who will be the Lead Agency. The Lead
Agency should be a youth-related agency or another appropriate organization
that will manage the development and implementation of the mapping activity.
This Lead Agency is responsible for most of the next steps.
After fundraising, this is one of the most important duties of the Advisory
Board. The definition of community will vary from location to location. In
some locations, community means a specific neighborhood or neighborhoods; in
others, community means everything within city or county limits. What is
important is not how the mapping team defines community but rather that the
team is very clear on what community means to them before they begin the
mapping activity.
The Lead Agency is responsible for working with the board to recruit the
Mapping Team. The Mapping Team consists of individuals who will have direct
working responsibility for designing and implementing the mapping activity. At
least 75% of the Mapping Team should be young people. These young people will
not only help design and plan the mapping protocol; they are also the only
individuals who will do the field work.
It is important to consider providing stipends for the Mapping Team. The Center
will work with the Lead Agency and the Advisory Board to develop a Community
YouthMapping® budget.
Now the Mapping Team must develop a mapping protocol that is tailored to its
particular definition of community. As part of the Center's technical
assistance and support, we provide sample questionnaires, process timetables,
and data plans. The Center works closely with each community to customize and
adapt each document to meet the specific needs of the Mapping Team.
Once the protocol is developed, the most important step for the Mapping Team is
their training. This is the phase where each Team member is trained on how to
identify a resource, conduct an interview using a professional approach,
document a resource as well as using risk management while mapping. This
training will be conducted by the Center. The duration of this training is
determined by the size and availability of the Mapping Team. The details of the
training will be developed between the Center, Lead Agency and the Advisory
Board.
After the training, the youth members of the Mapping Team will take the
protocol into the community as it has been defined by the Advisory Board, to
gather the necessary information. Sometimes, mapping field work is completed in
a relatively short period of time (for example, one or two weeks of
concentrated daily work). The duration of the field work is dependent on the
community and the Advisory Board.
Following completion of the field work, the resources that were identified must
be collected in usable formats and analyzed. Analysis of the mapping
information permits the Mapping Team to determine:
A thorough analysis of mapping results will lead to a report which summarizes
what the team found and presents their analysis and recommendations. Mapping
Teams can report and use the findings of their field work in a variety of
formats.
For further information on
Community YouthMapping®
or Center for Youth Development and Policy Research/
Academy for Educational Development
please contact Raul Ratcliffe at 202 884-8295