Olivia Strittmatter - Outdoor Experience for Juvenile Offenders

 Blog Post 11 - Topic of my Choosing 3


This blog post is going to be about an article that I read for my research paper. It’s titled Confrontation of Self Through Outdoor Challenge: Pennsylvania's Outdoor Experience for Juvenile Offenders by Waln K. Brown and Benjamin F. Simpson, Jr. 


Overall the article was about a “42 day outdoor experience” for juvenile offenders. They wanted to create a program that was designed to reduce the recidivism rates of juvenile offenders through a highly structured outdoor experience”.  It was designed to teach the kids skills that would teach them about life, and dealing with other people.


After the program was over the statistics showed that those who participated in the program had only a 20% recidivism rate within the first year compared to the recidivism rate of those who didn’t participate, which was at 42% within the first year. Though the recidivism rate started to increase after that first year to 38% compared to the 53% of those who didn’t participate. Then after five years the recidivism rates equalized. Which means that the effects of rigorous long-distance hiking are short-term, and don’t provide lifetime benefits. Either that or because they are youths, they aren’t in control of the environment that they are living in and that therefore they might not really have control over what happens to them. If I were to change something about the program, I would have it be a recurring thing, like every summer the group goes on another mini-program, maybe for only a few weeks instead of 42 days. Enough though to reinstall the benefits of the original hiking program.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Kayla Hammond- Christmas Saves The Year (student choice)

Kayla Hammond - Prayer as the Posture of the Decentered Self (Phenomenology Reading 2)

Kip Redick Introduction