Kapa Hillary M, Garcia Stephanie M, Thornton Christopher, Kerr Matthew, Muno Carolena, Holness Xadyah, Shakur Aquil, Myers Rachel K
Center for Violence Prevention, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 2716 South Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19146, USA.
PolicyLab, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 2716 South Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19146, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2025 May 29;25(1):1979. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-23145-w.
Despite urgent need for evidence-based violence prevention solutions, demonstrating the impact of community-based violence prevention programs, which are primed to be culturally relevant and community-tailored, remains difficult. Thus, our community-academic research team, conducted a participatory evaluation to identify proximal outcomes of Beyond the Bars (BTB), an urban United States-based music enrichment program seeking to empower young people and facilitate community healing from cycles of disinvestment and violence.
We explored perceived BTB outcomes on student participants through semi-structured qualitative interviews with 16 adolescent students (M=17.31 years, 69% male), 4 adult instructors (75% male), and 6 adult community partners (50% male). We coded interview transcripts and then iteratively analyzed relevant coded text to identify salient themes within and across interest holder groups.
Interviewees identified similar programmatic impacts on students, which we consolidated into five themes: (1) access to safe, creative spaces (2), musical and technical skill development (3), personal growth (4), relational and interpersonal growth, and (5) growth mindset and future orientation. They described outcomes as progressive, with students' gaining musical, social, and creative skills and access to a safe and supportive community being foundational to enhancements in self-efficacy and future orientation and budding efforts to advocate within their communities.
Our findings demonstrate integration of strengths-based approaches in youth violence prevention programming to support holistic wellbeing beyond risk reduction. Further, our work underscores need to develop evidence for and elevate community-generated solutions to rebuild and heal communities.
尽管迫切需要基于证据的暴力预防解决方案,但要证明以社区为基础的暴力预防项目的影响仍然很困难,这些项目旨在与文化相关并根据社区情况量身定制。因此,我们的社区学术研究团队进行了一项参与式评估,以确定“超越牢笼”(BTB)项目的近期成果。BTB是一个位于美国城市的音乐强化项目,旨在增强年轻人的权能,并促进社区从投资减少和暴力循环中恢复。
我们通过对16名青少年学生(平均年龄17.31岁,69%为男性)、4名成年教师(75%为男性)和6名成年社区合作伙伴(50%为男性)进行半结构化定性访谈,探讨了BTB项目对学生参与者的预期成果。我们对访谈记录进行编码,然后反复分析相关编码文本,以确定不同利益相关者群体内部和之间的突出主题。
受访者确定了该项目对学生产生的类似影响,我们将其归纳为五个主题:(1)获得安全、有创意的空间;(2)音乐和技术技能发展;(3)个人成长;(4)关系和人际成长;(5)成长型思维和未来导向。他们将这些成果描述为循序渐进的,学生获得音乐、社交和创造技能以及进入一个安全且支持性的社区是增强自我效能感和未来导向以及在社区内初步开展倡导工作的基础。
我们的研究结果表明,在预防青少年暴力的项目中整合基于优势的方法,以支持整体福祉,而不仅仅是降低风险。此外,我们的工作强调需要为社区生成的重建和治愈社区的解决方案提供证据并提升其地位。