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Table of Contents
April 2005
Issue Home
Free Legal Clinic Scheduled April 19th
Six Factors For Workplace Success
Tips To Aid In Stress Relief
Get Affordable Telephone Service
Getting An Advance On My Paycheck Through a Payday Lender
FSS Spotlight:
The Great FSS Trivia Challenge


Find the Weather for any City, State, Zip Code or Country

FSS Spotlight: The 40 Developmental Assets

The following are what has become known as the 40 Developmental Assets. These building blocks of healthy development help young people grow up healthy, caring and responsible. The more of the assets that a young person can possess, the more likely that the person will develop into a productive and responsible adult who contributes positively to society. As parents, you should want to work with your children to develop many of these important assets.

Support

1) Family Support –-Family life provides high levels of love and support.
2) Positive Family Communication—Young person and his/her parents communicate positively, and young person is willing to seek advice and counsel from parents.
3) Other adult relationships—Young person receives support from three or more non-parent adults.
4) Caring neighborhood—Young person experiences caring neighbors.
5) Caring school climate—School provides a caring, encouraging environment.
6) Parent involvement in schooling—Parents are actively involved in helping young person succeed in school.


Empowerment

7) Community values youth—Young person perceives that adults in the community value youth.
8) Youth as resources—Young people are given useful roles in the community.
9) Service to others—Young person serves in the community one hour or more per week.
10) Safety—Young person feels safe at home, school, and in the neighborhood.


Boundaries & Expectations

11) Family boundaries—Family has clear rules and consequences and monitors the young person’s whereabouts.
12) School boundaries—School provides clear rules and consequences.
13) Neighborhood boundaries—Neighbors take responsibility for monitoring young people’s behavior.
14) Adult role models—Parents and other adults model positive, responsible behavior.
15) Positive peer influence—Young person’s best friends model responsible behavior.
16) High expectations—Both parents and teachers encourage the young person to do well.


Constructive Use of Time

17) Creative activities—Young person spends three or more hours per week in lessons or practice in music, theater or other arts.
18) Youth programs—Young person spends three or more hours per week in sports, clubs, or organizations at school and/or in the community.
19) Religious community—Young person spends one or more hours per week in activities in a religious institution.
20) Time at home—Young person is out with friends “with nothing special to do” two or fewer nights per week.


Commitment to Learning

21) Achievement motivation—Young person is motivated to do well in school.
22) School engagement—Young person is actively engaged in learning.
23) Homework—Young person reports doing at least one hour of homework every school day.
24) Bonding to school—Young person cares about his or her school.
25) Reading for pleasure—Young person reads for pleasure three or more hours per week.


Positive Values

26) Caring—Young person places high value on helping other people.
27) Equality and social justice—Young person places high value on promoting equality and reducing hunger and poverty.
28) Integrity—Young person acts on convictions and stands up for his or her beliefs.
29) Honesty—Young person ”tells the truth even when it is not easy.”
30) Responsibility—Young person accepts and takes personal responsibility.
31) Restraint—Young person believes it is important not to be sexually active or to use alcohol or other drugs.


Social Competencies

32) Planning and decision making—Young person knows how to plan ahead and make choices.
33) Interpersonal competence—Young person has empathy, sensitivity, and friendship skills.
34) Cultural competence—Young person has knowledge of and comfort with people of different cultural/racial/ethnic backgrounds.
35) Resistance skills—Young person can resist negative peer pressure and dangerous situations.
36) Peaceful conflict resolution—Young person seeks to resolve conflict nonviolently.


Positive Identity

37) Personal Power—Young person feels he or she has control over “things that happen to me.”
38) Self-esteem—Young person reports having a high self-esteem.
39) Sense of purpose—Young person reports that “my life has a purpose.”
40) Positive view of personal future—Young person is optimistic about his or her personal future.