Wirkungsnachweis aus der Literatur

Kurzfristig (< 1 Jahr)
Mikro (Individuum)
Sozial

better school-related outcomes as a result of participation in extracurricular activities

Veränderung der schulischen Leistungen und Perspektiven

It was found that participating in extracurricular activities at the eleventh grade was associated with significantly higher GPA, school belonging, and intrinsic motivation even after controlling for demographic factors and GPA 1-year earlier at the tenth grade. The same regression analyses of specific types of activity involvement was conducted. Sports activities were positively associated with GPA (b = .06, p = .044). Sports (b = .12, p = .002), service (b = .11, p = .006), and arts (b = .12, p = .002) activities were significantly positive predictors of school belonging.

Beschreibung der Aktivität

Schulbezogene Jugendarbeit
extracurricular participation
involvement of extracurricular activities among immigrant high school adolescents’ pertaining to their academic achievement, school belonging, and intrinsic motivation and the impact of this involvment on participation in organized after-school activities
USA
10th and 11th grade students
teilnehmende Kinder und Jugendliche
Kinder und Jugendliche mit Migrationserfahrung

Evaluierung der Aktivität

Quantitative Fragebogenerhebung (schriftlich/offline)
questionnaires completed during the school day as part of an ongoing longitudinal study examining the role of family and ethnic identification in academic and psychological adjustment across time
‘‘Do you participate in any organized clubs, sports, or other activities at school?’: ‘‘Sports,’’ ‘‘School Publication (e.g., school newspaper, yearbook),’’ ‘‘Arts (e.g., dance, theater, choir, music, art),’’ ‘‘Social (e.g., peer counseling, student government),’’ ‘‘Academic (e.g., national honors society, academic decathlon),’’ ‘‘Community service club or organization,’’ ‘‘Ethnicity/religionrelated club or organization,’’ and ‘‘Other.’’
yes or no
A total of 468 eleventh grade students (47.6 % male and 52.4 % female) from three high schools in the Los Angeles area completed questionnaires.