|
Big impact—proven results
We’ve always known we were making a positive
impact on children and empowering them to
succeed. A nationwide study confirmed it for
us.
Our Impact
Each time Big
Brothers Big Sisters pairs a child with a
role model, we start something incredible: a
one-to-one relationship built on trust and
friendship that can blossom into a future of
unlimited potential. And thanks to the
first-ever nationwide impact study of a
mentoring organization, we have the facts to
prove it.
The Study
Public/Private
Ventures, an independent Philadelphia-based
national research organization, looked at
over 950 boys and girls from eight Big
Brothers Big Sisters agencies across the
country selected for their large size and
geographic diversity. This study, conducted
in 1994 and 1995, is widely considered to be
foundational to the mentoring field in
general and to Big Brothers Big Sisters
Community-Based program in particular.
Approximately
half of the children were randomly chosen to
be matched with a Big Brother or Big Sister.
The others were assigned to a waiting list.
The matched children met with their Big
Brothers or Big Sisters about three times a
month for an average of one year.
Researchers
surveyed both the matched and unmatched
children, and their parents on two
occasions: when they first applied for a Big
Brother or Big Sister, and again 18 months
later.
The Results
Researchers
found that after 18 months of spending time
with their Bigs, the Little Brothers and
Little Sisters, compared to those children
not in our program, were:
- 46% less
likely to begin using illegal drugs
- 27% less
likely to begin using alcohol
- 52% less
likely to skip school
- 37% less
likely to skip a class
- 33% less
likely to hit someone
They also found
that the Littles were more confident of
their performance in schoolwork and getting
along better with their families.
“We have known
all along that Big Brothers Big Sisters’
mentoring has a long-lasting, positive
effect on children’s confidence, grades, and
social skills,” affirms Karen J. Mathis, Big
Brothers Big Sisters of America’s President
and CEO, “and the results of this impact
study scientifically confirm that belief.”
“These dramatic
findings are very good news, particularly at
a time when many people contend that
‘nothing works’ in reaching teenagers,” said
Gary Walker, then-President of
Public/Private Ventures. “This program
suggests a strategy the country can build on
to make a difference, especially for youth
in single-parent families.”
The Big Brothers
Big Sisters Match
According to the
study, our one-to-one matches are the
driving force behind making an impact on
children. A Big Brothers Big Sisters’ match
is carefully administered and held to the
strictest standards. Agency staff strives
for matches that are not only safe and well
suited to each child’s needs, but also
harmonious and built to last. The entire
matching process, from the initial screening
to the final pairing—and beyond—is made
possible by your financial support.
But don’t just
think of us as simply matchmakers. We
provide ongoing support and supervision to
the Big, the Little, and the Little’s
family. We offer training and advice to help
ensure that the match is working for
everyone involved. And our local agencies
even receive their own ongoing training and
consulting from the Big Brothers Big Sisters
national office. It is this web of support
that helps maximize the likelihood that a
Big Brothers Big Sisters relationship will
thrive.
The study found
that Big Brothers Big Sisters’ matches
consistently spend more time together, and
continue as a match for longer periods, than
those in other mentoring programs which
Public/Private Ventures has studied.
“In mentoring
programs without this infrastructure, we
have found that relationships evaporate too
soon for effects to be possible,” said
Walker.
The Impact
According to the
study, Big Brothers Big Sisters programs
were found to “focus less on specific
problems after they occur, and more on
meeting youths’ most basic developmental
needs.”
The matches that
were observed shared everyday activities:
eating out, playing sports or attending
sports events, going to movies, sightseeing,
and just hanging out together.
But what
mattered to the children were not the
activities. It was the fact that they had a
caring adult in their lives. Because they
had someone to confide in and to look up to,
they were, in turn, doing better in school
and at home. And at a time in their lives
when even small choices can change the
course of their future, the Littles were
also avoiding violence and substance abuse.
In addition to
the lives of Littles being changed for the
better, the impact is contagious.
"When Little
Brothers and Little Sisters feel good about
themselves," said Mathis, "they can
positively impact their friends and
families, their schools, and their
communities. And as this important study has
shown, these young people believe in
themselves because a Big Brother or Big
Sister believed in them.”
Public/Private
Ventures, a national research organization
with more than 30 years of experience in
studying child development and social
service issues, conducted the independent
research.
The study was
funded by the Lilly Endowment, the
Commonwealth Fund, the Pew Charitable
Trusts, and an anonymous donor.
|