NCJ Number
168467
Date Published
1996
Length
46 pages
Annotation
In January 1993, a group of American professionals in the field of child and youth services gathered in Jerusalem for a 10- day seminar design to enable them to explore Israeli residential group care programs.
Abstract
The objective of the seminar was to glean information that might be helpful in enhancing services to marginal, disattached youth in the United States. Seminar participants learned about seven programs for Israeli juveniles. Two programs served socially disadvantaged adolescents; one had a religious orientation and the other did not. Two programs were designed for adjudicated delinquents, one in an institutional setting and the other a community-based group home. The other three programs emphasized remedial education for young adolescents, high school education for students identified as gifted but socially disadvantaged and unlikely to receive a quality education in their home communities, and a military regimen similar to boot camp programs in the United States. The seven programs are described in detail as the basis for elaborating philosophical and programmatic themes and the possible relevance of these themes to the U.S. context. Consideration is paid to education versus care, social integration, residential education and positive youth development, misbehavior and social control, and multiculturalism. A list of seminar participants is appended. 40 references