To support programs in Brooklyn, New York’s Prospect Park, including the Youth Council leadership development program and the Youth Employment Program.
To support a program that offers kids who already play a musical instrument the opportunity to learn the basics of music composition and how to compose their own works.
To support a natural resources management internship that helps Bronx teens pursue academic and career opportunities with hands-on outdoor experiences and advanced science study.
To support a program in which young people study the United Nation’s work on children’s rights and participate in discussions about social, economic, religious, and ethnic issues that affect them.
Do non-experimental methods provide a viable alternative to randomized experiments when trying to assess the effects of neighborhood on youth outcomes?
To support a pilot study aimed at informing a larger proposed National Institute of Child Health & Human Development project by collecting middle and high school yearbooks from schools in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health).
The William T. Grant Foundation invests in high-quality research focused on reducing inequality in youth outcomes and improving the use of research evidence in decisions that affect young people in the United States.