4001 - 4-H Youth Development Programming | ||
---|---|---|
4001.2) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they try to learn from their mistakes (Common Measures UN 3) |
4001.3) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they are willing to work hard on something difficult (Common Measures UN 4) |
4001.4) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they stop to think about their choices before making a decision (Common Measures UN 5) |
4001.5) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they think about how their choices affect others (Common Measures UN 6) |
4001.1) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they like to learn new things (Common Measures UN 1) |
4001.6) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they set goals for themselves (Common Measures UN 7) |
4001.7) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they keep trying until they reach their goals (Common Measures UN 8) |
4001.8) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they treat others the way they want to be treated (Common Measures UN 9) |
4001.9) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they follow the rules even if no one is watching (Common Measures UN 10) |
4001.10) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they are willing to try something they may get wrong (Common Measures UN 21) |
4001.11) | 0 |
Number of youth who indicated they are connected to a caring adult. |
4001.12) | 1140 |
Number of youth who applied the skills they learned in 4-H to home, school, or community. |
Author: Kimberly Ragland
Major Program: 4-H Youth Development Programming
Boyle County 4-H has a long tradition of working with local schools to provide educational content to students while sharing the breadth of extracurricular 4-H offerings available to them using an in-class club format. Local 4-H leaders strongly support the efforts of professional 4-H staff in classroom settings as these linkages provide the best marketing opportunity of other 4-H offerings to early 4-H age youth. Teachers and schools welcome the 4-H program into their classrooms bec