What We Work For

Youth Thrive believes that all young people should be valued, loved, and supported to reach their goals.

To achieve this, Youth Thrive works with youth-serving systems and its partners to change policies, programs, and practices so that they build on what we know about adolescent development, value young people’s perspectives, and give youth opportunities to succeed.

Youth Thrive is both a research-informed Framework on youth well-being and an action-oriented Initiative, based on the framework, that is designed to better support healthy development and promote well-being for youth with partners across the country.

For the past eight years, Youth Thrive has focused on strategies to improve systems that serve youth who are most marginalized in society, specifically focusing on child welfare and juvenile justice systems and the service system that supports youth who are at-risk of homelessness.

To get new resources and updates on Youth Thrive activities, sign up for the Youth Thrive newsletter here.

How We Do It

Our Approach

Youth Thrive works with states and communities as well as national networks, and other partners on activities such as:

  • Helping public agencies amend their policies, practices, contracting processes, training of staff, so that they are aligned with what the research indicates youth need to thrive.
  • Identifying, documenting and sharing best practices and innovative ideas.
  • Developing and using training curriculum and materials for direct service staff, supervisors and youth.
  • Creating new strategies and tools to implement Youth Thrive including the new Youth Thrive Survey, a self-assessment for assessing youth’s strengths.
  • Bringing together leaders for peer-to-peer learning at national conferences and other forums.
  • Partnering with youth, young adults, and young professionals who have lived experience in child welfare and juvenile justice to make sure Youth Thrive values and reflects their perspectives.
  • Prioritizing equity in all Youth Thrive activities, for example by:
    • Including information and research on the impact of racism, discrimination, and bias on youth well-being in our training and materials.
    • Encouraging systems to look at and address the worse outcomes they produce for youth of color, LGBTQ+ youth, and expectant and parenting youth.
Resources

Additional Resources

Resources

Featured Publications

  • Youth Thrive Changing Perspectives

  • The Five Protective and Promotive Factors

  • Youth Thrive Overview

  • Youth Thrive Survey User Manual

  • Youth Thrive: A Framework to Help Adolescents Overcome Trauma and Thrive

  • Youth Thrive: Advancing Healthy Adolescent Development and Well-Being

  • Youth Thrive: Youth Resilience

  • Youth Thrive: Social Connections

  • Youth Thrive: Knowledge of Adolescent Development

  • Youth Thrive: Cognitive and Social-Emotional Competence in Youth

 

The Team

Our Experts

  • Kaysie Getty, MSW

    Senior Program Analyst

  • Francie Zimmerman

    Senior Associate

  • Lisa Mishraky-Javier

    Senior Associate

  • Leonard Burton

    President and Chief Executive Officer