Breadcrumb
- Federal Resources
Federal Resources
Filter by Agency
- 21st CCLC Professionals (1)
- Academic Improvement and Teacher Quality Programs (1)
- Administration for Children and Families (16)
- Administration for Community Living (3)
- AmeriCorps (4)
- Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights (1)
- Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (1)
- Bureau of Indian Affairs (2)
- Bureau of Indian Education (1)
- (-) Bureau of Justice Assistance (6)
- Bureau of Land Management (1)
- Census Bureau (2)
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (38)
- (-) Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (1)
- Children’s Bureau (1)
- Civil Rights Division (DOJ) (1)
- Consumer Product Safety Commission (1)
- Division of Adolescent and School Health (DASH) (3)
- Employment and Training Administration (3)
- Family and Youth Services Bureau (14)
- Federal Bureau of Investigation (2)
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) (1)
- Federal Emergency Management Agency (4)
- Federal Highway Administration (1)
- Federal Student Aid (7)
- Federal Trade Commission (1)
- Food and Nutrition Service (2)
- General Accounting Office (1)
- (-) General Services Administration (4)
- Health Resources and Services Administration (3)
- Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) (2)
- Institute of Education Sciences (53)
- Institute of Museum and Library Services (1)
- National Agricultural Library (1)
- National Center for Education Statistics (58)
- National Center on Safe Supportive Learning Environments (3)
- National Clearinghouse on Families & Youth (NCFY) (5)
- National Collaborative on Workforce & Disability for Youth (4)
- National Institute of Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (2)
- (-) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (4)
- National Institute of Justice (2)
- National Institute of Mental Health (12)
- National Institutes of Health (14)
- (-) National Science Foundation (1)
- National Telecommunications and Information Administration (2)
- NDTAC (5)
- Office of Adolescent Health (1)
- Office of Civil Rights (9)
- Office of Disability Employment Policy (5)
- Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (1)
- Office of Elementary and Secondary Education (10)
- Office of Federal Student Aid (2)
- Office of Innovation and Improvement (1)
- Office of Justice Programs (13)
- Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (36)
- Office of Planning, Evaluation, and Policy Development (1)
- Office of Postsecondary Education (4)
- Office of Public Health and Science (2)
- Office of Safe and Healthy Students (11)
- Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services (1)
- Office of Special Education Programs (16)
- Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health (1)
- Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs (1)
- Office of Vocational and Adult Education (2)
- Policy and Program Studies Service (2)
- Public and Indian Housing Division (2)
- Rehabilitation Services Administration (1)
- Reserve Affairs (1)
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) (54)
Filter by Topic
- Afterschool (6)
- Children of Incarcerated Parents (3)
- Civic Engagement (1)
- Collaboration (1)
- Community Development (8)
- Disabilities (1)
- (-) Education (9)
- (-) Gang Prevention (4)
- Health and Nutrition (20)
- Juvenile Justice (8)
- (-) Mental Health (4)
- Mentoring (1)
- Parenting (1)
- Positive Youth Development (9)
- Program Development (4)
- Safety (1)
- Service Learning (1)
- Substance Use/Misuse (4)
- Teen Driver Safety (1)
- Violence Prevention & Victimization (6)
Bureau of Justice Assistance Training and Technical Assistance
This resource provides technical assistance to practitioners in state, local, and tribal justice systems.
Gang Resistance and Education Program
The G.R.E.A.T. Program is a school-based, law enforcement officer-instructed classroom curriculum. With prevention as its primary objective, the program is intended as an immunization against delinquency, youth violence, and gang membership.
Why Youth Join Gangs
OJJDP, BJA, and the National Gang Center developed “Why Youth Join Gangs,” an online video that features (a) gang researchers and practitioners providing their perspectives on gang joining and (b) youth sharing their gang experiences. The video highlights risk factors that may play a role in a youth’s decision to join a gang and behaviors that might be observed when interacting with youth at high risk of joining a gang.
Parents’ Guide to Gangs: Now Available in Spanish
NGC has published a Spanish version of the Parents' Guide to Gangs. This resource is designed to provide parents with answers to common questions about gangs and to help them recognize and prevent gang involvement.
Resource: Redesigned National Gang Center Website
This redesigned website features new focus areas on criminal justice, communities and research, an inquiries section for quicker responses from staff, new forms to request technical assistance, the National Gang Center blog, and OJJDP Comprehensive Gang Model tools. Communities can utilize these resources in their gang prevention, intervention, and suppression efforts.
Resource: Leveraging the Every Student Succeeds Act to Improve Educational Services in Juvenile Justice Facilities
This policy brief (PDF, 12 pages), developed by the American Youth Policy Forum, the National Reentry Resource Center, and the Council of State Governments Justice Center, provides information to state and local policymakers as well as education and juvenile justice leaders about how to use requirements under the Every Student Succeeds Act to improve education and workforce outcomes for youth in long-term juvenile justice facilities.
Share with Youth: A Roadmap to Behavioral Health: A Guide to Using Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Services
This guide (PDF, 24 pages) can help people understand how to use health insurance coverage to improve their mental and physical health. It provides an eight step road map for understanding behavioral health, finding and accessing appropriate providers, and staying on the road to recovery.
Computers for Learning
The CFL program's ambitious goal is to make modern computer technology an integral part of every classroom so that every child has the opportunity to be educated to his or her full potential.
10 Tips To Get Ready for Back to School
Kids.gov developed 10 tips that can help parents make the transition back to school easier for students. Tips address topics like time management, back to school shopping, and talking with teachers.
Resource: Kids.gov Re-envisioned
This blog post describes the re-envisioning of Kids.gov, a project which aims to improve the site to better suit the public’s needs.
Resource: Support for Families When a Suicide Attempt Hits Home
This resource provides information, tips, and useful links to families who have experienced a suicide attempt to assist in getting appropriate help and to foster resiliency.
Children, Youth, and Families Education and Research Network
CYFERnet is a national network of Land Grant university faculty and county Extension educators working to support community-based educational programs for children, youth, parents and families. It provides program, evaluation and technology assistance for children, youth and family community-based programs and is funded as a joint project of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's NIFA and the Cooperative Extension System
National Network for Child Care
NNCC unites the expertise of many of the nation's leading universities through the outreach system of Cooperative Extension. Our goal is to share knowledge about children and child care from the vast resources of the land grant universities with parents, professionals, practitioners, and the general public.
Program Evaluation Tip Sheets
These tip sheets, developed by Penn State Extension, are teaching tools that apply scientific and communication principles to an extension evaluation problem in the field.
Resource: Clearinghouse for Military Family Readiness
This clearinghouse helps providers identify, select, and implement evidence-based programs and practices to address wide-ranging family and mental health issues. The searchable database includes effective and promising intervention programs as well as resources and strategies to ensure the welfare of military families.
Academic Achievement Trajectories of Homeless and Highly Mobile Students: Resilience in the Context of Chronic and Acute Risk
As featured by the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness, the University of Minnesota released a study, Academic Achievement Trajectories of Homeless and Highly Mobile Students: Resilience in the Context of Chronic and Acute Risk, which examined academic achievement of students identified as homeless or highly mobile as compared with other students in the federal free meal program, reduced price meals, or neither. This study was partially federally funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Science Foundation.