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National Evaluation of the Runaway Youth Program - Executive Summary

NCJ Number
78809
Date Published
1980
Length
18 pages
Annotation
This report summarizes the results of an evaluation of over a 19-month period of the National Runaway Youth Program, which was designed to determine the extent to which youth projects met original legislative goals and to measure against these same goals the impact of the services provided on clients.
Abstract
Data were gathered through literature reviews and site visits. Overall, the projects have successfully operationalized the goals of the program by meeting the immediate needs of youth, resolving family problems, securing stable living arrangements for youth, and helping youth decide upon a future course of action. The projects provided such services as individual, family, and group counseling; legal and medical assistance; and placement services and demonstrated positive working relationships with key service providers. Most of the projects had developed written policy procedures, had conducted formal staff performance reviews, had implemented case management practices, and had established open communication systems among staff members. All but 1 of the 20 evaluation sites developed local goals in addition to the legislative ones, and all projects demonstrated considerable diversity and range in their services. Projects are becoming increasingly integrated into their local youth service networks in contrast to initial runaway programs which operated as informal 'counter-culture' undertakings. The most serious service limitations were the provision of followup and after care services. Projects served a diverse client population and achieved positive impact on clients; they are generating new funding sources and developing volunteer programs, and are developing new service models. Footnotes are included.