Youth come together for common goal
By Chelsea Parrish, 16, and Ben Brow, 15
According to the Search
Institute, youth with twenty-one or more of 40 Developmental
Assets are less likely to engage in risk taking behaviors such
as drinking or sexual activity than those with under twenty
assets.
The 40 Developmental Assets‰ were created by Search Institute
President and Founder Peter Benson. They are divided into two
main categories, internal and external assets. In those two
categories there are four sub-groups which contain anywhere
from Four to
six assets. Assets include things such as Personal Power, Other
Adult Relationships, and Resistance Skills.
On October 30th over seventy teens attended a Youth Summit
to discuss the results of the Profiles of Student Life Survey.
The
survey identified the percentages of students who had each
of the 40 Developmental Assets. The summit was hosted by the
Great
Lakes Center for Youth Development (GLCYD) for eighth though
twelfth graders in Marquette and Alger Counties. The goal was
to identify the top three assets in two categories. Those they
were concerned about, and those they were less concerned about.
Thirteen-year old Katy Martin of Marquette felt that attending
the event was worthwhile.
“
It’s really increased my knowledge of the values that are
important,” Martin said “As well as the values
that are lacking.”
The survey was given in 2006 to almost two thousand students
in grades eight, ten, and twelve. The survey asked teens in
Marquette and Alger counties about the 40 Developmental Assets,
and which
assets they considered strengths. After a day of discussion
and activities they came to a conclusion. The top three assets
considered
strengths were Safety, Family Support, and a Positive View
of the Future. The top three assets that teens thought needed
improvement
were Restraint, Adult Role Models, and Planning and Decision-Making.
“
Many places around the country that do the Profiles of Student
Life Survey will, when they get the results back, have an event
like this,” said Paul Olson, a Youth Development Associate
from GLCYD.
Olson’s role at the summit was to coordinate discussions
about the assets, as well as facilitate groups reviewing the
survey. He feels that the youth input will be very relevant
to the future development of assets in the community.
“
It seems only appropriate that we would want to have feedback
directly from the primary stakeholders,” Olson said, “which
are the young people themselves.”
The Upper Peninsula has various youth summits throughout the
year, but this was the first one to focus specifically on the
40 Developmental Assets. Sixteen-year old Joe Burke of Ishpeming
feels that the summit should be held annually.
“
Problems can change every year,” said Burke, “we
should try to figure them out.”
Besides figuring out the top strengths and concerns at the
summit, Olson hopes that youth learned some important lessons.
“
I hope that young kids learn from this event that they can advocate
for themselves,” explained Olson. “They have the
ability and even the responsibility to participate in how their
community is run, and to have a responsibility to speak up about
what goes on in the youth environment in our community, and to
make their voices heard, to speak directly to adults and to community
members, and to be able to say, ‘This is what I want my
environment to look like, and the environment for younger kids
who are going to come up behind me,’” Olson added.
Seventeen-year-old Sean Corcoran of Ishpeming feels that the
youth attendees aren’t the only ones who learned something
from the event.
“
The adults that were here (also learned),” Corcoran said. “Especially
when it comes to communicating with the teens and giving them
opportunities to do things and really understanding that there
are the ‘good kids’ out there,” he added.
One of the results of the summit GLCYD hoped would happen was
that information about the assets would spread into other schools
and communities and help create asset-builders.
Eighteen-year-old
Caleb Carlson of Negaunee thinks that everyone can be an asset-builder
and compel change in their own schools or communities.
“
I’d just encourage everybody to make a contribution to
society. Lots of people think that what they do won’t or
can’t make any kind of a difference in their community,
but it will,” Carlson explains. “If someone stands
up for something that they believe is right, or if there’s
an issue someone disagrees with or thinks that something should
be handled much stronger, than I definitely encourage anyone
who has anything to say to stand up and say something and act
on it.”
Martin knows that she’s learned a lot and is excited about
taking what she’s learned and applying it in her life.
“
I’ve gained a lot of knowledge so far, and hopefully I’ll
gain more about how I can make a difference, and how we can become
involved with adults and leaders in our community to change what
we need to change,” she said.
According to Olson, GLCYD hopes to have another summit when
the survey is given again in 2008. Carlson agrees that having
another
summit would be a good idea.
“
I think it would definitely help that this kind of event should
occur again,” he explains. “Because people who are
just coming into high school and other people who are becoming
old enough to contribute to society will be able to look at what’s
going on in the community and what they can do to help.”
An interview with Peter Benson
By Andrew LaCombe, 17, Chelsea Parrish, 16, and Megan Maas
14
In early November,
a team of journalists from 8-18 Media traveled to Rochester,
New York to attend the 11th annual Healthy Communities
Healthy Youth Conference. While at the conference, 8-18 Media
interviewed Peter Benson, the president and founder of the
Search Institute, as well as the creator of the 40 Developmental
Assets‰. Benson’s ultimate goal is to reach a “tipping
point” of having ten million conscious asset builders
worldwide.
8-18: What is the ultimate goal of asset building?
Benson: I think the ultimate goal is to maximize the chances
that young human beings get off to a fabulous start in life,
that young human beings become really strong, engaged adults
in the world, to become really good workers, great parents,
committed to their communities. So I think the ultimate goal
is a healthier society, a safer society, and a society in which
people are more likely to blossom and flourish than they can
now.
8-18: Why do you feel that it is important for youth to have
assets?
Benson: Because there’s a lot of science behind the assets.
The research shows that the assets are probably the most important
strategy to promote academic achievement. If you build assets
you help young people stay in school. If you build assets you
can reduce drug, alcohol and tobacco use really dramatically.
If you build assets you can reduce violence in communities
dramatically. But what I also like about building assets is
that it draws a community of people together on the same team.
8-18: What does society need to do as a whole to build assets
in youth?
Benson: I think as a society some of that is about national
policy and the way in which our government should be making
choices to invest in the development of young people. I think
as a nation we could do a lot more in investing in our public
schools than we do. Nationally, it would be great if youth
development were really a strong part of how government saw
its role in America.
8-18: In your childhood, did you ever consider building assets
in youth as an option in your future?
Benson: When I was a teenager I think I knew I was going to
create some idea about social change. I grew up in an era where
we became very aware that there were things in our society
that weren’t as strong as they should be, issues of race,
poverty, women. So I got really into these issues of how do
you change how a nation approaches things? How do you change
how a nation thinks? And that’s a heavy part of what
we’re doing in the asset building model, trying to change
how America thinks and acts with young people.
8-18: How do you think asset building will change in the future?
Benson: In the ten, fifteen, years we’ve been articulating
these building blocks, society changes. Maybe we’ll be
adding a couple developmental assets as critical for human
growth as the world changes.
8-18: When do you think we’ll reach the “tipping
point” of having ten million asset builders?
Benson: I think we’re going to get to that tipping point
of ten million in about five to six years. We’re going
to do some new things to really communicate and reach out and
draw more people into this wonderful movement.
8-18: How do you plan to draw people into the movement?
Benson: We need to build Search Institute’s communication
capacity. We want to expand our training and our training of
trainers. And finally, we’re going to become very intentional
about trying to reach American parents and drawing them into
this. We’ve really got to reach and empower millions
of parents to be very intentional about building assets in
their children’s lives.