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Wilson, Melanie; Nicholson, Kristal S. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
In the past several years, social services agencies that work with marginalized youth have reported increased interest in using spiritual activities as one tool in a more standard array of therapeutic interventions. Where it has occurred, the use of spirituality in such settings tends to reflect the agencies' belief that spiritual concepts have a…
Descriptors: Spiritual Development, Social Services, Adolescents, Religious Factors
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Petersen, Anne C. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
The author notes that she finds the case for making spiritual development a priority surprisingly compelling--"surprisingly" because although she is an expert on adolescent development, she has not done research or previously written about spiritual development. She suggests that a systems analysis occur first, before engaging frontline youth…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Spiritual Development, Religious Factors, Religion
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Rhodes, Jean E.; Chan, Christian S. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
Religious organizations offer a potentially rich pool of caring adults who are driven by their own spiritual commitments and a strong ethic to serve others. Indeed, more Americans volunteer through religious organizations than through any other venue. Religious organizations account for half of all volunteering, with an estimated 60 percent of the…
Descriptors: Mentors, Family (Sociological Unit), Disadvantaged Youth, Religious Organizations
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Louie-Badua, Liane J.; Wolf, Maura – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
Service-learning, by its very nature, fosters young people's spiritual development, especially in experiencing a sense of interconnectedness with others and the rest of the world; opening one's heart; and expanding self-inquiry and self-knowledge. (Contains 7 notes.)
Descriptors: Religious Factors, Spiritual Development, Service Learning, Consciousness Raising
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Kimball, Elisabeth M. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
This article focuses on whether people have the resolve to integrate spiritual development into youth worker preparation. Once an organization is convinced that attentiveness to spiritual development has the potential to enrich and improve youth work practice, equipping youth workers with the necessary skills and capacities can proceed. A model…
Descriptors: Youth, Youth Employment, Youth Programs, Self Concept
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Green, Maxine – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
Youth work in the United Kingdom is a profession requiring three years of training, and its beginnings are strongly rooted in a spiritual (often specifically Christian) context. Until the past few decades, spirituality was also integrated within the educational system. The author argues that intentionally bringing spirituality to the center of…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Foreign Countries, Religious Factors, Spiritual Development
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Quinn, Jane – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
Speaking to the issue of spiritual development from her extensive experience as a youth work practitioner, the author notes several ideas she finds particularly compelling, among them that spiritual development interacts with, yet is distinct from, moral and religious development; that spiritual development is a core construct of identity…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Spiritual Development, Youth Programs, Values Education
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Pittman, Karen; Garza, Pamela; Yohalem, Nicole; Artman, Stephanie – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
If strengthening children's moral and spiritual selves is the most important challenge facing youth-serving organizations in the United States today, three things are required to respond: a clear road map of where to go and how to get there, a critical mass of champions prepared to lead the way, and candid readiness assessments and strategies for…
Descriptors: Spiritual Development, Youth Programs, Moral Values, Moral Development
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Henderson, Karla A.; Bialeschki, M. Deborah – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
Camps have long addressed multiple components of young people's development, including spiritual development. In particular, transcendental communion with nature and the outdoors may provide one pathway for young people's spiritual development. The physical, mental, social, and spiritual growth of young people has been at the core of camps for…
Descriptors: Youth, Spiritual Development, Youth Programs, Individual Development
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Emmett, John A. – New Directions for Youth Development, 2008
In this article, the author writes lyrically of the struggle of young people to find meaning and hope in an increasingly secular world, and focuses his discussion on potential roles for adults "who are in serious life-shaping relationships with young people. . . to recognize and respond to the spiritual development of young people." The…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Religious Factors, Spiritual Development, Religion