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Health and
Mental Health
Education
Arts and Culture
International
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NEW!
Urban Women Against Substance Abuse (UWASA), a past project
of the Institute for Community Research (1996-2001), has been
recognized by the Western
Center for the Application of Prevention Technologies (CAPT),
the Office
of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) and
the Center
for Substance Abuse Prevention (CSAP) as a "Promising
Program" for substance abuse prevention. The project also
resulted in a curriculum, "Empowered
Voices: A Participatory Action Research Curriculum for Girls"
that can be used by other organizations and institutions. |
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Health
and Mental Health
Encontrando el Poder Dentro de Tí
(EPDT)
U1SPO8813A 10/01/99 - 9/30/01
The goals of this two-year project are to increase the capacity
of Hartford's Latino community to deliver best practices in
effective parenting and family programs in order to reduce or
prevent substance abuse and to disseminate this knowledge for
national use. Specifically, the project will identify and document
key elements associated with community readiness to select,
adapt, and implement proven family strengthening models designed
to reduce substance abuse risk factors and increase resiliency
factors in Puerto Rican/Latino families with preschool age children
in two, low-income densely populated Hartford neighborhoods.
Using an action research approach to assess needs, the project
will select and modify a proven family strengthening model and
then implement and evaluate the adapted intervention. The project
is a collaboration between the Institute for Community Research
and El Centro de Desarrollo y Reafirmacion Familiar (El Centro),
a Puerto Rican/Latino family resource center of the Institute
for the Hispanic Family. Funding is by the Center for Substance
Abuse Prevention.
Education
Building Preventive Group Norms in
Urban Middle Schools
1R01 DA12015-01 9/01/99 - 1/31/04
This four-year study will develop and test a substance abuse
and sexual risk prevention intervention based on the integration
of social construction theory and cooperative learning instructional
techniques with 6th and 7th grade middle school students in
an urban Connecticut school district. The first year of the
study involves rewriting and pilot testing an existing curriculum
based on self-control and problem solving, with a small number
of classrooms. The second, third, and fourth years will involve
introducing the curriculum to 6th and 7th grade teachers, providing
ongoing training, consultation, and technical assistance, and
assessing the process of implementation. Study outcomes will
be measured using the Social and Health Assessment Instrument
currently used to measure changes in social development and
risk behavior in the school district. The project is a joint
effort of the Institute for Community Research, the New Haven
Public Schools Social Development Office, Yale University, and
the University of Massachusetts. A supplement considers the
relative efficacy of social problem solving and social construction
approaches for reproductive health and HIV prevention instruction
at the sixth grade level. Both studies are funded by the National
Institute on Drug Abuse.
Building Ethical Communities through
Service-Learning
9/30/00 - 6/30/01
The primary goal of this project is to promote ethical, civic
and academic growth in Connecticut students using the strategy
of service learning. Youth from the Institute for Community
Research's National Teen Action Research Center (NTARC) will
participate in a service-learning workshop hosted by the Albert
Schweitzer Institute and The School for Ethical Education. During
the workshop the NTARC team will develop an action plan for
a service learning project to be completed over the course of
the school year.
Education and Advocacy Project
7/01/00 - 6/30/01 This one-year project, a program of the Institute's
National Teen Action Research Center, seeks to enhance and improve
teaching and learning through student action research. The project
is being pilot-tested in 5th and 6th grade classrooms in four
Connecticut school districts (Hartford, Middletown, New Haven,
and Windham). Nine teachers are integrating student-driven action
research using cooperative learning methods into core curricular
activities. Following a one-week summer teacher training institute,
staff from the Institute for Community Research work with the
schools, principals, and teachers to implement the project.
Funding is by the William Graustein Memorial Fund.
Evaluating the National Teen Action
Research Prevention Training Program
(National Teen Action Research Center)
Contract #83600 7/01/00 - 6/01/02
This two-year project is designed to evaluate the process and
outcomes of conducting action research for prevention with teenagers
between the ages of 13 and 19. The project, carried out by adult
and youth staff of the Institute for Community Research's National
Teen Action Research (NTARC) Center, will assess the efficacy
of training youth to conduct their own research on issues of
importance to them, and design activities including education
and advocacy intended to address these issues in their schools
and communities. The program will be assessed in four school
communities in the state of Connecticut. Teens trained through
the NTARC summer youth research institute will work with other
teens in target communities over a yearlong period to develop
action research programs on prevention related topics. The program
will be evaluated using a pre-post quasi-experimental control
group design. Funding is by the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention
through the Connecticut State Department of Mental Health and
Addiction Services.
The Sexual Minority Youth Project (National
Teen Action Research Center)
Contract #83600 10/01/99 - 11/30/02
This three-year project will use action research with sexual
minority youth and their allies to develop and support program
and policy changes in four communities around the state of Connecticut.
Youth will be recruited and trained by staff of the National
Teen Action Research Center in issues of identity, relationships,
communications skills, and action research methods. They will
develop their own short and long term action plans, and will
train other lesbian, gay, transgender, bisexual and questioning
(LGTBQ) youth and their allies in gay-straight alliances and
other locations to develop action research efforts designed
to improve learning and social environments for other LGTBQ
youth. The project's advisory committee includes representatives
of prominent state and national organizations promoting safety
and supports for LGTBQ youth. The project fills a unique gap
in work with LGTBQ youth and is funded through the Governor's
Prevention Initiative for Youth, State Department of Mental
Health and Addiction Services. An initial grant was from the
Gill Foundation.
Arts and Culture
Connecticut Cultural Heritage Arts
Archive Management Project
7/01/00 - 6/30/01
The project will assess documentation materials such as photographs,
oral history recordings, and print information collected during
ten years of fieldwork research by the Connecticut Cultural
Heritage Arts Program of the Institute for Community Research.
Appropriate strategies for organization and storage of materials
will be designed, and ideas for public programming using the
archive materials will be developed. Funding is by the Connecticut
Humanities Council.
Polish Traditional Arts in Connecticut
7/01/00 - 4/30/01
This is a fieldwork and exhibition project with Connecticut's
large Polish community. The exhibit will explore some of the
ways that Polish-Americans preserve and practice traditions
from their homeland, through the creation and use of handmade
art forms. The project is a partnership between the Connecticut
Cultural Heritage Arts Program and the Polish Studies Department
at Central CT State University. Support is by the Connecticut
Commission on the Arts and the Roberts Foundation.
Southeast Asian Traditional Arts After-School
Program
9/01/00 - 8/31/01
Cambodian, Hmong, and Laotian artists from the Connecticut Cultural
Heritage Arts Program are leading classes in traditional music,
song, dance, and language for Connecticut high school students
and other members of their communities. Project partners are
Khmer Health Advocates of Hartford, the Lao Saturday School
of New Britain, and the Hmong Foundation of Connecticut. Funding
is by the National Endowment for the Arts' initiative, Creative
Links: Positive Alternatives for Youth.
Connecticut Cultural Heritage Arts
Program Infrastructure Grant
4/01/00 - 3/31/01
This one-year grant supports the ongoing work of the ten-year
old Connecticut Cultural Heritage Arts Program. The award includes
partial salary costs as well as support for essential basic
program activities such as archiving, fieldwork, and development
o educational services. Funding is by the National Endowment
for the Arts.
Southern New England Traditional Arts
Apprenticeship Program
7/01/00 - 6/30/01
This program brings together master traditional artists and
apprentices from Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island.
These three states share many communities with a common history
of immigration and occupation, and the program connects artists
from the same ethnic or occupational group in one state with
a teacher or apprentice in one of the other states. The Connecticut
Cultural Heritage Arts Program manages the apprenticeships in
partnership with the Folk Arts Programs of the Rhode Island
State Council on the Arts and the Massachusetts Cultural Council.
This program, now in its third year, is funded by the National
Endowment for the Arts.
Connecticut Cultural Heritage Arts
Program Organizational Challenge Grant
7/01/00 - 6/30/01
This one-year grant supports the work of the Institute for Community
Research's statewide folk and traditional arts program, especially
its activities which expand the participation of artists in
underserved or overlooked communities. Funding is by the Connecticut
Commission on the Arts.
International
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