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Definition

Youth Transitioning into Adulthood Programs are defined by the CEBC as programs that increase the skills, knowledge, and supports of youth who age out of the child welfare system while in out-of-home care and, therefore, have to transition out of the foster care system and live on their own. Transition programs are aimed at increasing independent living and self-sufficiency skills and/or developing formal or informal social connections that can provide guidance and support to youth beyond their time in foster care or receiving services. Independent living and self-sufficiency skills could include employment (including readiness and retention), financial management, healthy meal planning and preparation, securing and maintaining stable housing, and/or other life skills. Every year in California, more than 4,000 youth age out of foster care. The youth who age out of foster care are more likely to experience difficulty managing the transition from dependent adolescence to independent adulthood. Foster youth face unique challenges for making a successful transition into adulthood in employment, higher education, marriage, and parenthood. A large number of these youth have special needs including mental health issues and disabilities, both learning and physical. Former foster youth face the added burden of a disrupted childhood and possible lack of family support. The transition period from adolescence to adulthood is longer and more complex for today's young adults. NOTE: Many topic areas on the CEBC may be relevant to youth transitioning into adulthood. In particular, the Educational Interventions for Children and Adolescents in Child Welfare, Teen Pregnancy Services, and Mentoring Programs (Child & Adolescent) may be highly relevant and should be reviewed if interested in programs addressing those particular services.

  • Target population: Transition age youth who may age out of the foster care system, have already aged out of it, or have emancipated from it
  • Services/types that fit: Services including assessment, case planning, case management, counseling or mentoring on issues related to emerging adulthood, development of social connections and support systems, education, financial support, and/or skill building
  • Delivered by: Child welfare caseworkers, trained paraprofessionals, educators, and mental health professionals
  • In order to be included: Program must specifically target the needs of youth aging out of the foster care system or the needs of youth with similar characteristics (e.g., runaway and homeless youth, pregnant or parenting youth, youth with mental health needs or developmental disabilities, etc.) as they enter adulthood as a goal
  • In order to be rated: There must be research evidence (as specified by the Scientific Rating Scale) that examines outcomes for youth transitioning into adulthood such as independent living/self-sufficiency skills, family/social connections, employment, higher education, housing, and parenthood

Downloadable Topic Area Summary

Definition

Youth Transitioning into Adulthood Programs are defined by the CEBC as programs that increase the skills, knowledge, and supports of youth who age out of the child welfare system while in out-of-home care and, therefore, have to transition out of the foster care system and live on their own. Transition programs are aimed at increasing independent living and self-sufficiency skills and/or developing formal or informal social connections that can provide guidance and support to youth beyond their time in foster care or receiving services. Independent living and self-sufficiency skills could include employment (including readiness and retention), financial management, healthy meal planning and preparation, securing and maintaining stable housing, and/or other life skills. Every year in California, more than 4,000 youth age out of foster care. The youth who age out of foster care are more likely to experience difficulty managing the transition from dependent adolescence to independent adulthood. Foster youth face unique challenges for making a successful transition into adulthood in employment, higher education, marriage, and parenthood. A large number of these youth have special needs including mental health issues and disabilities, both learning and physical. Former foster youth face the added burden of a disrupted childhood and possible lack of family support. The transition period from adolescence to adulthood is longer and more complex for today's young adults. NOTE: Many topic areas on the CEBC may be relevant to youth transitioning into adulthood. In particular, the Educational Interventions for Children and Adolescents in Child Welfare, Teen Pregnancy Services, and Mentoring Programs (Child & Adolescent) may be highly relevant and should be reviewed if interested in programs addressing those particular services.

  • Target population: Transition age youth who may age out of the foster care system, have already aged out of it, or have emancipated from it
  • Services/types that fit: Services including assessment, case planning, case management, counseling or mentoring on issues related to emerging adulthood, development of social connections and support systems, education, financial support, and/or skill building
  • Delivered by: Child welfare caseworkers, trained paraprofessionals, educators, and mental health professionals
  • In order to be included: Program must specifically target the needs of youth aging out of the foster care system or the needs of youth with similar characteristics (e.g., runaway and homeless youth, pregnant or parenting youth, youth with mental health needs or developmental disabilities, etc.) as they enter adulthood as a goal
  • In order to be rated: There must be research evidence (as specified by the Scientific Rating Scale) that examines outcomes for youth transitioning into adulthood such as independent living/self-sufficiency skills, family/social connections, employment, higher education, housing, and parenthood

Downloadable Topic Area Summary

Why was this topic chosen by the Advisory Committee?

The Youth Transitioning into Adulthood Programs topic area is relevant to child welfare because older foster youth may need assistance obtaining the skills and knowledge required for a successful transition into adulthood. Since the passing of the Chaffee Foster Care Independence Act, some funds have been available to serve this population. However, outcome studies still demonstrate many youth are homeless, pregnant, and unemployed after leaving care. Child Welfare Agencies and the Courts need information on effective youth transitioning services and supports; and need to know how to help youth establish or re-establish strong and enduring ties to one or more nurturing adults.

Roseann Myers
Former CEBC Advisory Committee Member

Why was this topic chosen by the Advisory Committee?

The Youth Transitioning into Adulthood Programs topic area is relevant to child welfare because older foster youth may need assistance obtaining the skills and knowledge required for a successful transition into adulthood. Since the passing of the Chaffee Foster Care Independence Act, some funds have been available to serve this population. However, outcome studies still demonstrate many youth are homeless, pregnant, and unemployed after leaving care. Child Welfare Agencies and the Courts need information on effective youth transitioning services and supports; and need to know how to help youth establish or re-establish strong and enduring ties to one or more nurturing adults.

Roseann Myers
Former CEBC Advisory Committee Member

Topic Expert

Youth Transitioning Into Adulthood Programs was one of new topic areas launched in 2006. Curtis McMillen, PhD was the topic expert and was involved in identifying and rating any of the programs with an original load date of 2006 or earlier (as found on the bottom of the program's page on the CEBC). The topic area has grown over the years and in 2016, the topic area was revised and expanded. All of the Youth Transitioning Into Adulthood Programs added since 2006 were identified by CEBC staff, the Scientific Panel, and/or the Advisory Committee. For these programs, Dr. McMillen was not involved in identifying or rating them.

Topic Expert

Youth Transitioning Into Adulthood Programs was one of new topic areas launched in 2006. Curtis McMillen, PhD was the topic expert and was involved in identifying and rating any of the programs with an original load date of 2006 or earlier (as found on the bottom of the program's page on the CEBC). The topic area has grown over the years and in 2016, the topic area was revised and expanded. All of the Youth Transitioning Into Adulthood Programs added since 2006 were identified by CEBC staff, the Scientific Panel, and/or the Advisory Committee. For these programs, Dr. McMillen was not involved in identifying or rating them.

Programs

Better Futures

The purpose of Better Futures is to support young people in exploring their postsecondary interests and opportunities, and in preparing them to participate in postsecondary education, including college and vocational training programs. Grounded in self-determination promotion, and developed as a postsecondary-focused adaptation of the My Life program, Better Futures engages youth in a four-day postsecondary immersion experience along with the following supports that are provided for 9 months after that experience:

  • Youth-directed relationship support from a coach who is currently in postsecondary education and who has personal life experience in foster care
  • Coaching in applying achievement, partnership, and self-regulation skills to identify and reach postsecondary and related youth-chosen goals (e.g., dream, set goals, problem-solve, schmooze to reach out to allies, negotiate, appreciate accomplishments, hang tough against stress)
  • Support for experiential activities aimed at career and postsecondary exploration and preparation, along with related goal achievement
  • Workshops that bring together participants, coaches, and successful near peers (i.e., peers currently in postsecondary education and who have lived experience in foster care) for learning, peer support, and networking

Each youth identifies and works towards self-identified postsecondary and related goals. The youth is supported to carry out a series of postsecondary exploration and preparation activities (e.g., review high school transcript, interview/shadow someone in a career or with a degree of interest, visit a college or vocational program, complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid [FAFSA], explore housing options) and to develop at least one individual plan for future support with a trusted adult ally.

Scientific Rating 2

LifeSet

LifeSet provides intensive in-home support and guidance to young adults leaving the foster care, juvenile justice, and/or mental health systems, as well as to others who find themselves at this stage in life without the necessary skills and supports to make a successful transition to adulthood. Program success is defined as a young adult’s maintenance of stable and suitable housing, avoidance of negative legal involvement, participation in an educational/vocational program, and development of life skills necessary to become a successful, productive citizen. The program not only assists with young adults who are “aging out” of state custody, but also works with the young person’s family and support systems to ensure a more successful transition.

Scientific Rating 3

My Life

The purpose of My Life is to support young people in learning how to direct their lives and achieve their educational and transition to adulthood goals. Grounded in self-determination enhancement, My Life provides youth with 9-12 months of:

  • Youth-directed relationship support
  • Coaching in applying achievement, partnership, and self-regulation skills to identify and reach goals (e.g., set goals, problem-solve, find information and help, negotiate, find allies, focus on accomplishments, manage discouragement)
  • Support for experiential activities aimed at goal achievement and guided skill practice
  • Workshops that bring together participants and successful near peers who also have lived experience in foster care, for learning, peer support, and networking

Each youth identifies and works towards self-identified educational and/or transition goals, shares his or her goals and support needs with important adults during a youth-led meeting, and develops at least one individual plan for future support with a trusted adult.

Scientific Rating 3

Transition to Independence Process (TIP) Model

The Transition to Independence Process (TIP) Model was developed for working with youth and young adults (14-29 years old) with emotional/behavioral difficulties (EBD) to: a) engage them in their own futures planning process; b) provide them with accessible, developmentally appropriate, nonstigmatizing, culturally competent, trauma-informed, and appealing services and supports; and c) involve the young people, their families (of origin or foster), and other informal key players, as relevant, in a process that prepares and facilitates their movement toward greater self-sufficiency and successful achievement of their goals. Youth and young adults are guided in setting and achieving their own short-term and long-term goals across relevant Transition Domains, such as: employment/career, educational opportunities, living situation, personal effectiveness/well-being, and community-life functioning. The TIP Model is operationalized through seven Guidelines and their associated Core Practices that drive the work with young people to improve their outcomes and provide a transition system that is responsive to them and also to their families.

Scientific Rating 3

Caring Adults ‘R’ Everywhere

Caring Adults '˜R' Everywhere (C.A.R.E.) is a 12-week natural mentoring intervention designed to address social support needs of youth preparing to exit foster care by facilitating and strengthening naturally occurring relationships and supporting the development of growth-fostering relationship between them and their self-selected natural mentors (i.e., helpful nonparental adults from within the youth's social network). Prior to enrollment in C.A.R.E., a master's-level social worker referred to as an interventionist meets individually with the youth in an effort to identify an appropriate natural mentor. Once the natural mentors have been screened and approved, they undergo a trauma-informed training. During the 12-week intervention, youth and their natural mentors participate in a variety of group activities as well as supportive one-on-one sessions with the interventionist designed to strengthen and clarify expectations surrounding the natural mentoring relationship. Additionally, the foster youth and natural mentor dyads are expected to meet a minimum of 2 hours per week for unstructured dyad "match" time, during which they can work on life skills and engage in other enriching community-based activities. Aftercare/booster sessions are available following the 12-week intervention.

Scientific Rating NR

Family Alternatives

This model is designed to address the socioemotional needs of older youth in foster care who are nearing transition to adulthood. The model employs a holistic approach by transforming the agency culture to one that empowers youth to develop, work toward and accomplish their goals, build supportive relationships, and become informed of the effects of trauma in their lives. Core tenets include believing that youth have the innate wisdom to know and understand themselves, their needs and aspirations; believing that youth have the capacity to make their own decisions; providing youth opportunities to discover what they need to be successful; allowing youth to learn by doing. This requires the adults in the lives of youth to shift long held beliefs and standardized child welfare practices. It requires more than a few months for everyone to adapt to this way of working together.

Scientific Rating NR

Fostering Success Coach Model

The model focuses on providing holistic support for these youth and young adults while they pursue and/or enroll in postsecondary education settings. The Fostering Success Coach Model of practice takes into account the unique challenges of living through adversity and the foster care system. The Fostering Success Coaching Model's skills are designed to enhance a child welfare or higher education professional's ability to partner with youth assessing strengths and challenges in targeted seven life domains' education, employment, housing, health, relationships, identity and life skills--by prioritizing level of need and intervening by teaching life skills that strengthen youths' healthy habits as they transition to the emerging adult years. The model's seven core elements are cultural humilty, interdpendent relationships, learner-centered approach, teaching in real time, skill-based asset development, network development, and empowerment evaluation. Understanding these core elements is fundamental in assessing, prioritizing, and coaching the students.

Scientific Rating NR

Independent Living Program-Orangewood

ILP, developed by the Orangewood Foundation, provides workshops, special events, support services, and case management to foster youth between the ages of 16-21 to help prepare them for the transition to independence. Each month ILP focuses on one of four key areas:

  • Education
  • Career
  • Relationships
  • Daily Living

Scientific Rating NR

Larkin Extended Aftercare for Supported Emancipation

LEASE, a program of Larkin Street Youth Services, is a scattered-site residential program for youth ages 18-24 who have emancipated from the foster care system. Youth are housed in studio, one-bedroom, or two-bedroom apartments and receive a range of supportive services including counseling, employment training, education counseling, and case management. Most participants attend college on a part-time or full-time basis. Youth work with their Case Manager to develop an individual plan to meet their unique needs. For all participants, an emphasis is placed on developing the life skills needed for independent living such as household organization and money management.

Scientific Rating NR

Massachusetts Adolescent Outreach Program

The MA Outreach program assists teenage intensive foster care youths in preparing to live independently and to achieve permanency after exiting care. The goals of the program are to help youths earn high school diplomas, continue education, avoid nonmarital childbirth, avoid high-risk behaviors, avoid incarceration, gain employment, attain self-sufficiency, and avoid homelessness. Other goals include supporting youths' participation in higher education, achieving permanency through a connection to a caring adult, and identifying a support network.

Scientific Rating NR

My First Place

My First Place (MFP) is a manualized education and employment program model that provides housing and intensive case management to transition-age foster youth. With a stable place to live, these young adults can ideally focus on education, employment, and career goals; build community; and establish foundations for long-term success. Participants are expected to develop and practice skills around housing, health and well-being, financial literacy, education, and employment. By individualizing plans for each youth to progress to living-wage career pathways, this program is designed to help these young adults build the education, experience, networks, and skills to be self-sufficient in the long term.

Scientific Rating NR

MyPath Savings

MyPath Savings is a banking and savings model that is designed to seamlessly integrate key financial capability components into youth workforce programs, including direct deposit, vetted youth-owned financial products (a checking and restricted savings account), a blended in-person and online financial education curriculum, and saving incentives. Youth participants are supported to open accounts, set a personal savings goal, set up direct deposit, use auto-split to save a designated portion of each paycheck, and incentives to meet their goal. MyPath provides workforce programs with the training and technical assistance they need to integrate these components into their existing program cycles.

Scientific Rating NR

Opportunity Passport

The Jim Casey Youth Opportunities Initiative's Opportunity PassportTM helps young people improve their financial capability when transitioning from foster care. The Opportunity PassportTM includes financial education and support with establishing, maintaining, and growing a bank account; and, purchasing developmentally appropriate assets through matched savings opportunities. The financial resources assist young people meet their life goals with asset purchases such as vehicles, education, housing, health care, investment, credit building and microenterprise endeavors. Opportunity PassportTM participants complete a baseline survey at enrollment and a bi-annual survey for the duration of their participation in the program to measure progress.

Scientific Rating NR

Rising Tide Communities – Orangewood

Rising Tide Communities, developed by Orangewood Foundation, is a transitional housing program. The program provides a range of options for TAY, which includes housing, employment assistance, education assistance, ongoing training in day-to-day life skills, counseling and mentoring. Rising Tide Communities is an intentional community to assist TAY to develop skills that are designed to assist them in as they move into more permanent housing situation.

Scientific Rating NR

Seita Scholars Program

The Seita Scholars Program is a campus-based support program for undergraduate students who experienced foster care and are attending Western Michigan University. Students receive support from coaches to successfully navigate seven life domains:

  • Academics
  • Finances and employment
  • Housing
  • Physical and mental health care
  • Social relationships and community connections
  • Cultural and personal identity
  • Life skills

Students have access to 24-hour on-call support and emergency financial resources. The program includes a scholarship at the university and students are required to live on campus.

Scientific Rating NR

Threshold Mothers Project Transitional Living Program

The Thresholds Mothers Project Transitional Living Program (TLP) provides comprehensive services for 17-23 year-old pregnant/parenting young women with mental health challenges referred by child welfare, juvenile justice, or homelessness. The TLP includes 24-hour staffed residences where young mothers and their children live together, and receive support and guidance at the moments when it is most needed. Additionally, residents receive case management, individual and group therapy, Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) skills training, psychiatry, Parent Education, Supported Employment and Education services, and access to the Early Learning Center.

By utilizing the Transition to Independence Process (TIP) Model and other practices as the program's foundation, the Mothers Project and all Thresholds Youth & Young Adult Services focus heavily on creative engagement strategies, enhancing competencies, facilitating self-discovery, and utilizing a team approach driven by the young person's preferences for goal planning to help those who have been hardest to reach.

Scientific Rating NR

Works Wonders®

Works Wonders® promotes increased well-being, career development, employment and education engagement, relational competencies, and self-determination for youth who are currently in (or have aged out of) foster care and/or involved in other systems. Works Wonders® is not designed to simply place youth in jobs but works to help them explore career paths that align to their individual interests and needs while assisting them to build the social competencies that are necessary for positive, productive workplace relationships. The program addresses barriers to employment and educational attainment through community partnerships and leveraged resources. Works Wonders® aims to empower youth to achieve success as they transition into adulthood.

Scientific Rating NR

YouthBuild

YouthBuild programs give low-income young people who have fallen off the edges of society the opportunity to transform their own lives, get back on track to adult responsibility, and give back to their communities. Each year about 10,000 low-income young people who have left high school without a diploma enroll full-time in YouthBuild programs for about 10 months. They spend at least 50% of their time, usually alternate weeks, in caring academic classrooms, and at least 40% in hands-on job training building affordable housing or other community assets. A strong emphasis is placed on creating a safe and caring community of adults and peers committed to each other's success.

In the course of their full-time enrollment, they:

  • Achieve their high school equivalency credentials or high school diplomas in a caring individualized context
  • Obtain job skills and earn a stipend, wage, or living allowance by working on building affordable, increasingly green housing for homeless and low income people in their communities
  • Gain industry-recognized certifications in preparation for productive careers (in addition to construction, some train for jobs in healthcare, technology, or customer service)
  • Solve personal problems with counseling support such as addressing urgent needs for housing or child care, working to have their juvenile justice records expunged, or other concerns
  • Give back and lead through participation in community service and advocating for their communities on the local and national levels
  • Transition into postprogram placements such as college, registered apprenticeships, other postsecondary opportunities, and employment, with support of a transition coordinator and mentors

Scientific Rating NR

Programs

Better Futures

The purpose of Better Futures is to support young people in exploring their postsecondary interests and opportunities, and in preparing them to participate in postsecondary education, including college and vocational training programs. Grounded in self-determination promotion, and developed as a postsecondary-focused adaptation of the My Life program, Better Futures engages youth in a four-day postsecondary immersion experience along with the following supports that are provided for 9 months after that experience:

  • Youth-directed relationship support from a coach who is currently in postsecondary education and who has personal life experience in foster care
  • Coaching in applying achievement, partnership, and self-regulation skills to identify and reach postsecondary and related youth-chosen goals (e.g., dream, set goals, problem-solve, schmooze to reach out to allies, negotiate, appreciate accomplishments, hang tough against stress)
  • Support for experiential activities aimed at career and postsecondary exploration and preparation, along with related goal achievement
  • Workshops that bring together participants, coaches, and successful near peers (i.e., peers currently in postsecondary education and who have lived experience in foster care) for learning, peer support, and networking

Each youth identifies and works towards self-identified postsecondary and related goals. The youth is supported to carry out a series of postsecondary exploration and preparation activities (e.g., review high school transcript, interview/shadow someone in a career or with a degree of interest, visit a college or vocational program, complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid [FAFSA], explore housing options) and to develop at least one individual plan for future support with a trusted adult ally.

Scientific Rating 2

LifeSet

LifeSet provides intensive in-home support and guidance to young adults leaving the foster care, juvenile justice, and/or mental health systems, as well as to others who find themselves at this stage in life without the necessary skills and supports to make a successful transition to adulthood. Program success is defined as a young adult’s maintenance of stable and suitable housing, avoidance of negative legal involvement, participation in an educational/vocational program, and development of life skills necessary to become a successful, productive citizen. The program not only assists with young adults who are “aging out” of state custody, but also works with the young person’s family and support systems to ensure a more successful transition.

Scientific Rating 3

My Life

The purpose of My Life is to support young people in learning how to direct their lives and achieve their educational and transition to adulthood goals. Grounded in self-determination enhancement, My Life provides youth with 9-12 months of:

  • Youth-directed relationship support
  • Coaching in applying achievement, partnership, and self-regulation skills to identify and reach goals (e.g., set goals, problem-solve, find information and help, negotiate, find allies, focus on accomplishments, manage discouragement)
  • Support for experiential activities aimed at goal achievement and guided skill practice
  • Workshops that bring together participants and successful near peers who also have lived experience in foster care, for learning, peer support, and networking

Each youth identifies and works towards self-identified educational and/or transition goals, shares his or her goals and support needs with important adults during a youth-led meeting, and develops at least one individual plan for future support with a trusted adult.

Scientific Rating 3

Transition to Independence Process (TIP) Model

The Transition to Independence Process (TIP) Model was developed for working with youth and young adults (14-29 years old) with emotional/behavioral difficulties (EBD) to: a) engage them in their own futures planning process; b) provide them with accessible, developmentally appropriate, nonstigmatizing, culturally competent, trauma-informed, and appealing services and supports; and c) involve the young people, their families (of origin or foster), and other informal key players, as relevant, in a process that prepares and facilitates their movement toward greater self-sufficiency and successful achievement of their goals. Youth and young adults are guided in setting and achieving their own short-term and long-term goals across relevant Transition Domains, such as: employment/career, educational opportunities, living situation, personal effectiveness/well-being, and community-life functioning. The TIP Model is operationalized through seven Guidelines and their associated Core Practices that drive the work with young people to improve their outcomes and provide a transition system that is responsive to them and also to their families.

Scientific Rating 3

Caring Adults ‘R’ Everywhere

Caring Adults '˜R' Everywhere (C.A.R.E.) is a 12-week natural mentoring intervention designed to address social support needs of youth preparing to exit foster care by facilitating and strengthening naturally occurring relationships and supporting the development of growth-fostering relationship between them and their self-selected natural mentors (i.e., helpful nonparental adults from within the youth's social network). Prior to enrollment in C.A.R.E., a master's-level social worker referred to as an interventionist meets individually with the youth in an effort to identify an appropriate natural mentor. Once the natural mentors have been screened and approved, they undergo a trauma-informed training. During the 12-week intervention, youth and their natural mentors participate in a variety of group activities as well as supportive one-on-one sessions with the interventionist designed to strengthen and clarify expectations surrounding the natural mentoring relationship. Additionally, the foster youth and natural mentor dyads are expected to meet a minimum of 2 hours per week for unstructured dyad "match" time, during which they can work on life skills and engage in other enriching community-based activities. Aftercare/booster sessions are available following the 12-week intervention.

Scientific Rating NR

Family Alternatives

This model is designed to address the socioemotional needs of older youth in foster care who are nearing transition to adulthood. The model employs a holistic approach by transforming the agency culture to one that empowers youth to develop, work toward and accomplish their goals, build supportive relationships, and become informed of the effects of trauma in their lives. Core tenets include believing that youth have the innate wisdom to know and understand themselves, their needs and aspirations; believing that youth have the capacity to make their own decisions; providing youth opportunities to discover what they need to be successful; allowing youth to learn by doing. This requires the adults in the lives of youth to shift long held beliefs and standardized child welfare practices. It requires more than a few months for everyone to adapt to this way of working together.

Scientific Rating NR

Fostering Success Coach Model

The model focuses on providing holistic support for these youth and young adults while they pursue and/or enroll in postsecondary education settings. The Fostering Success Coach Model of practice takes into account the unique challenges of living through adversity and the foster care system. The Fostering Success Coaching Model's skills are designed to enhance a child welfare or higher education professional's ability to partner with youth assessing strengths and challenges in targeted seven life domains' education, employment, housing, health, relationships, identity and life skills--by prioritizing level of need and intervening by teaching life skills that strengthen youths' healthy habits as they transition to the emerging adult years. The model's seven core elements are cultural humilty, interdpendent relationships, learner-centered approach, teaching in real time, skill-based asset development, network development, and empowerment evaluation. Understanding these core elements is fundamental in assessing, prioritizing, and coaching the students.

Scientific Rating NR

Independent Living Program-Orangewood

ILP, developed by the Orangewood Foundation, provides workshops, special events, support services, and case management to foster youth between the ages of 16-21 to help prepare them for the transition to independence. Each month ILP focuses on one of four key areas:

  • Education
  • Career
  • Relationships
  • Daily Living

Scientific Rating NR

Larkin Extended Aftercare for Supported Emancipation

LEASE, a program of Larkin Street Youth Services, is a scattered-site residential program for youth ages 18-24 who have emancipated from the foster care system. Youth are housed in studio, one-bedroom, or two-bedroom apartments and receive a range of supportive services including counseling, employment training, education counseling, and case management. Most participants attend college on a part-time or full-time basis. Youth work with their Case Manager to develop an individual plan to meet their unique needs. For all participants, an emphasis is placed on developing the life skills needed for independent living such as household organization and money management.

Scientific Rating NR

Massachusetts Adolescent Outreach Program

The MA Outreach program assists teenage intensive foster care youths in preparing to live independently and to achieve permanency after exiting care. The goals of the program are to help youths earn high school diplomas, continue education, avoid nonmarital childbirth, avoid high-risk behaviors, avoid incarceration, gain employment, attain self-sufficiency, and avoid homelessness. Other goals include supporting youths' participation in higher education, achieving permanency through a connection to a caring adult, and identifying a support network.

Scientific Rating NR

My First Place

My First Place (MFP) is a manualized education and employment program model that provides housing and intensive case management to transition-age foster youth. With a stable place to live, these young adults can ideally focus on education, employment, and career goals; build community; and establish foundations for long-term success. Participants are expected to develop and practice skills around housing, health and well-being, financial literacy, education, and employment. By individualizing plans for each youth to progress to living-wage career pathways, this program is designed to help these young adults build the education, experience, networks, and skills to be self-sufficient in the long term.

Scientific Rating NR

MyPath Savings

MyPath Savings is a banking and savings model that is designed to seamlessly integrate key financial capability components into youth workforce programs, including direct deposit, vetted youth-owned financial products (a checking and restricted savings account), a blended in-person and online financial education curriculum, and saving incentives. Youth participants are supported to open accounts, set a personal savings goal, set up direct deposit, use auto-split to save a designated portion of each paycheck, and incentives to meet their goal. MyPath provides workforce programs with the training and technical assistance they need to integrate these components into their existing program cycles.

Scientific Rating NR

Opportunity Passport

The Jim Casey Youth Opportunities Initiative's Opportunity PassportTM helps young people improve their financial capability when transitioning from foster care. The Opportunity PassportTM includes financial education and support with establishing, maintaining, and growing a bank account; and, purchasing developmentally appropriate assets through matched savings opportunities. The financial resources assist young people meet their life goals with asset purchases such as vehicles, education, housing, health care, investment, credit building and microenterprise endeavors. Opportunity PassportTM participants complete a baseline survey at enrollment and a bi-annual survey for the duration of their participation in the program to measure progress.

Scientific Rating NR

Rising Tide Communities – Orangewood

Rising Tide Communities, developed by Orangewood Foundation, is a transitional housing program. The program provides a range of options for TAY, which includes housing, employment assistance, education assistance, ongoing training in day-to-day life skills, counseling and mentoring. Rising Tide Communities is an intentional community to assist TAY to develop skills that are designed to assist them in as they move into more permanent housing situation.

Scientific Rating NR

Seita Scholars Program

The Seita Scholars Program is a campus-based support program for undergraduate students who experienced foster care and are attending Western Michigan University. Students receive support from coaches to successfully navigate seven life domains:

  • Academics
  • Finances and employment
  • Housing
  • Physical and mental health care
  • Social relationships and community connections
  • Cultural and personal identity
  • Life skills

Students have access to 24-hour on-call support and emergency financial resources. The program includes a scholarship at the university and students are required to live on campus.

Scientific Rating NR

Threshold Mothers Project Transitional Living Program

The Thresholds Mothers Project Transitional Living Program (TLP) provides comprehensive services for 17-23 year-old pregnant/parenting young women with mental health challenges referred by child welfare, juvenile justice, or homelessness. The TLP includes 24-hour staffed residences where young mothers and their children live together, and receive support and guidance at the moments when it is most needed. Additionally, residents receive case management, individual and group therapy, Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) skills training, psychiatry, Parent Education, Supported Employment and Education services, and access to the Early Learning Center.

By utilizing the Transition to Independence Process (TIP) Model and other practices as the program's foundation, the Mothers Project and all Thresholds Youth & Young Adult Services focus heavily on creative engagement strategies, enhancing competencies, facilitating self-discovery, and utilizing a team approach driven by the young person's preferences for goal planning to help those who have been hardest to reach.

Scientific Rating NR

Works Wonders®

Works Wonders® promotes increased well-being, career development, employment and education engagement, relational competencies, and self-determination for youth who are currently in (or have aged out of) foster care and/or involved in other systems. Works Wonders® is not designed to simply place youth in jobs but works to help them explore career paths that align to their individual interests and needs while assisting them to build the social competencies that are necessary for positive, productive workplace relationships. The program addresses barriers to employment and educational attainment through community partnerships and leveraged resources. Works Wonders® aims to empower youth to achieve success as they transition into adulthood.

Scientific Rating NR

YouthBuild

YouthBuild programs give low-income young people who have fallen off the edges of society the opportunity to transform their own lives, get back on track to adult responsibility, and give back to their communities. Each year about 10,000 low-income young people who have left high school without a diploma enroll full-time in YouthBuild programs for about 10 months. They spend at least 50% of their time, usually alternate weeks, in caring academic classrooms, and at least 40% in hands-on job training building affordable housing or other community assets. A strong emphasis is placed on creating a safe and caring community of adults and peers committed to each other's success.

In the course of their full-time enrollment, they:

  • Achieve their high school equivalency credentials or high school diplomas in a caring individualized context
  • Obtain job skills and earn a stipend, wage, or living allowance by working on building affordable, increasingly green housing for homeless and low income people in their communities
  • Gain industry-recognized certifications in preparation for productive careers (in addition to construction, some train for jobs in healthcare, technology, or customer service)
  • Solve personal problems with counseling support such as addressing urgent needs for housing or child care, working to have their juvenile justice records expunged, or other concerns
  • Give back and lead through participation in community service and advocating for their communities on the local and national levels
  • Transition into postprogram placements such as college, registered apprenticeships, other postsecondary opportunities, and employment, with support of a transition coordinator and mentors

Scientific Rating NR