About Afterschool Matters
Through the Afterschool Matters Initiative, the National Institute on Out-of-School Time (NIOST) offers out-of-school-time (OST) professionals unique opportunities to expand their own research, evaluation, program development, and policy-making skills. The two components of the dynamic Initiative are: National Afterschool Matters (NASM) Fellowship Program, an intensive professional development opportunity for OST professionals and Afterschool Matters Journal--a peer-reviewed journal that is produced semi-annually and highlights the work of OST researchers, NASM Fellows, OST practitioners, and other related professionals.
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History
Afterschool Matters began in 2000 as a national, peer-reviewed journal dedicated to promoting professionalism, scholarship, and consciousness in afterschool education. It was published by Susan Ingalls, then executive director of the Foundation for Children and the Classics, and edited by Elaine Lyons, then executive director of Interfaith Neighbors, and funded in part by the Robert Bowne Foundation. NIOST Director Michelle Seligson joined its advisory board that year.
The Robert Bowne Foundation took over publishing of the second edition in 2003 with Jan Gallagher as editor. In 2007, the foundation awarded more than $2.1 million over five years to NIOST for the National Afterschool Matters Initiative, a broader undertaking to promote research and professional development for the OST industry.
NIOST thus took ownership of the journal as well as several other projects that the foundation had incubated: a Practitioner Fellowship Program, the Edmund A. Stanley, Jr. Research Grantee program, and Research Roundtables, a forum for connecting research and practice. NIOST Senior Research Scientist Georgia Hall headed the overall initiative and became managing editor of the journal, and Jan Gallagher continued as editor.
In 2015, NIOST, in partnership with the National Writing Project and funded again by the Robert Bowne Foundation, launched the National Afterschool Matters Fellowship, a two-year professional development and leadership training program for mid-career OST and youth development professionals. The fellowship welcomed its first cohort of participants that year and a second in 2017.
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Publication Ethics and Publication Malpractice Statement
Afterschool Matters Journal follows the COPE Code of Conduct and Best Practice Guidelines for Journal Editors.
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Contact
For information on Afterschool Matters Initiative, the National Afterschool Matters (NASM) Fellowship Program and Afterschool Matters Journal, please contact:
Georgia Hall, Ph.D.
Director, NIOST
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For submissions to Afterschool Matters Journal, please contact:
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