Below is an excerpt by Betsy Nordell, Ed.D., a NIOST master observer, from the book . The book was co-edited by NIOST Director Georgia Hall, Ph.D., Jan Gallagher, Ph.D., of Clear, Effective Communications, and NIOST Research Associate Elizabeth Starr, M.Ed. Here, Nordell talks about Relational Cultural Theory and how it can help us understand the transformative power of OST professionals.
Ideas we as youth development professionals now take for granted, such as the human need for connection, the value of empathy and compassion, and the power of positive relationships to foster growth, can be traced back to Jean Baker Miller and her seminal book, (1976). The book鈥檚 content, once viewed as dangerous, prevailing ideas about human growth and development.
Miller to the entrenched psychological models that articulated healthy human development as a process of increasing separation, autonomy, and independence. These models did not align with from her mostly female patients in her clinical practice. She sought to to psychological theory, identifying connection, empathy, and mutuality not as weaknesses or lower stages of development, but as strengths. Over time, through close collaboration with others, Miller鈥檚 beginning ideas evolved into the Relational Cultural Theory (RCT).
RCT views the as the markers and causes of human growth and development. We are social beings, built to function optimally in . Gains in neuroscience have demonstrated this hardwired .
How people are met by the world, every day and over time, . As RCT scholar Maureen Walker , "Our sense of place and purpose in the world is shaped not only by formative relationships but by the omnipresent cultural messaging that establishes standards of beauty, goodness, worth, values, and reality." RCT reminds us to carefully consider the ways the cultural context, with its established power dynamics, .
RCT is a natural fit for the OST field in many ways. For one, the OST program environment tends to allow than traditional classroom settings do. Researchers have found this opportunity to cultivate positive relationships is a significant draw for OST professionals; it helps to their work.
Youth workers鈥 genuine interest in forging strong bonds and creating a connected community pays dividends. The positive quality of adult-youth and youth-youth relationships to which youth can set aside distractions, feel safe enough to fully engage, admit they do not understand something, and ask for help. RCT uses the term power-with to that intentionally support connection, empowerment, and growth. This dynamic arises when adults and young people alike strive to respect and acknowledge each person鈥檚 value, knowledge, and authentic capacity to contribute, while honoring different people鈥檚 needs and roles.
In power-with OST environments, adults tap into youth experience, expertise, and interests and provide age-appropriate leadership responsibilities. RCT specifically identifies five good things that happen within, and are outcomes of, such growth-fostering relationships:
1. Each person feels a greater sense of zest (vitality, energy).
2. Each person feels more able to act and does act.
3. Each person has a more accurate picture of themselves and the other person(s).
4. Each person feels a greater sense of worth.
5. Each person feels more connected to other person(s) and feels a greater motivation to connect with other people beyond those in one鈥檚 primary relationships.
Youth development professionals young people鈥檚 beliefs about who they are, what they can do, and who they can become. The research supports what is evident in the personal stories of youth workers in this volume: that their passion for positive relationships is the mechanism by which OST programs effect transformation.
Betsy Nordell, Ed.D., is a NIOST master observer. The above excerpt appears in the book .


It鈥檚 back-to-school time and families, youth, and educators must adjust their schedules for another school year. In the midst of the forms and information families receive 鈥 or that get 鈥渓ost鈥 in a child鈥檚 backpack or locker 鈥 you may have heard something about a (SEL) initiative or curriculum. In fact, the local school system in my rural, seaside community is convening a team of educators to consider how SEL can inform and improve what teachers are already doing to promote positive youth outcomes.
From my desk at NIOST, I鈥檓 starting the school year by working at the national, state, and local levels to support educators and administrators in their efforts to promote positive youth outcomes, especially in the expanding field of SEL. Specifically, I am researching the SEL programs that states are currently adopting in preparation for our forthcoming workshop for out-of-school time (OST) leaders on how to integrate these practices into school-age child care or other OST settings. As I do this work, my background as a former school committee member and education advocate means I can鈥檛 resist passing along the newest SEL information that comes across my desk to the regional school administrators in my community who are convening the SEL planning discussions for local schools.