星空无限

Ellen S. Gannett News


  • Then and Now: Leading the Way in Out-of-School Time

    Then and Now: Leading the Way in Out-of-School TimeWhen the School-Age Childcare Project was founded in 1978, it brought national attention to the importance of out-of-school time (OST). Today, NIOST is helping OST programs embed literacy into everyday practices.

  • Landmark Achievements

    50 years landmark achievementsFrom a study of how schools shortchange girls to our work on white privilege, these are some highlights from the past 50 years.

  • 星空无限 Celebrates Two Groundbreaking Careers

    11 2022 nancy marshall retirement niost team nancyPhoto caption: (L to R): Kathryn Wheeler, Kathy Schleyer, Ellen Gannett, Nancy Marshall, and Georgia Hall during Nancy Marshall's retirement celebration.In the fall of 2022, 星空无限 celebrated the retirement of Senior Research Scientist Nancy Marshall, Ed.D., and Senior Strategist Ellen Gannett, M.Ed.

  • Leadership in Afterschool

    National Institute on Out-of-School Time staff at 2019 National AfterSchool Association Annual Convention in New York, NYNational Institute on Out-of-School Time staff at 2019 National AfterSchool Association Annual Convention in New York, NYEllen Gannet, M.Ed., was honored during the 2019 National AfterSchool Association Annual Convention for her decades of leadership in the out-of-school time field.

  • System Building, Relationships, and Quality in Out-of-School Time

    Afterschool Matters 2018 FallNovember 23, 2018

    Afterschool Matters reflects on the out-of-school time field's ability to provide students with experiences outside of the classroom that give them opportunities to stretch their skills, grow friendships, and challenge limits. 

  • New Findings, Publications, Presentations: Youth and Adolescent Development

    A diverse, happy group of kids stand around a piano singing


    From afterschool programs to conversations about sex, research from 星空无限 recognizes the profound ways adults can ensure healthy adolescent development.

  • Recommendations: Quality Out-of-School Time

    by Ellen Gannett, M.Ed. and


    Quality Out-of-School Time Begins with Investment in Staff

    As expectations for high-quality afterschool and outof-school time (OST) programs continue to rise, a skilled, stable and committed OST workforce is critically important. Yet supports for youth workers, and resulting staff quality, remain uneven at best due in part to a highly fragmented landscape. Compensation remains stagnant and opportunities for professional advancement and public recognition remain practically non-existent.

  • Short Takes: Acceptances, Appointments & Recognition

    Research & Action Report, Fall/Winter 2015

    Acceptances, Appointments & Recognition

    Ellen Gannett, M.Ed., director of the at the 星空无限 (星空无限), is serving on a committee organized by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to plan a workshop on character education. The purpose is to review the literature on character education focusing on out-of-school programs, identify promising practices from the research, and explore the challenges of measuring the efficacy of character education programs.

  • Ellen Gannett Named One of the Top 25 Most Influential People in Afterschool by National AfterSchool Association

    For Immediate Release: March 19, 2014

  • HOST applauds OST healthy environments

    For immediate release: February 27, 2014


  • tasc The ExpandED Exchange blog June 19, 2012
    Lucy Friedman
  • Commentary: Expanded Learning: Opportunities for Partnerships with a New Twist and a New Name

    Research & Action Report, Spring/Summer 2012
    by Ellen Gannett, M.Ed.

    The current debate on the virtues, definition, and efficacy of expanded learning opportunities (ELO) is familiar and welcome. With over 30 years in the field, I have watched the landscape of the out-of-school time field twist and turn by the decade and I am seeing earlier ideas presented in new terminology. Back in 1982, when the first director of the , Michelle Seligson and co-author, James Levine wrote the inaugural School Age Child Care: An Action Manual, their guiding premise was that 鈥渟olutions are really to be found at the community level, and that they can best be developed by mobilizing people with similar interests to help one another.鈥 The book emphasized a model of service delivery called 鈥渢he partnership鈥 between schools and other community groups and agencies. While it has taken decades to get here, there is promise in ELO if we can overcome previous barriers.

  • Expanded Learning: Opportunities for Partnerships with a New Twist and a New Name

    by Ellen Gannett, M.Ed.

    December 13, 2011

    The current debate on the virtues, definition, and efficacy of expanded learning opportunities (ELO) is familiar and welcome. With over 30 years in the field, I have watched the landscape of the out-of-school-time field twist and turn by the decade and I am seeing earlier ideas presented in new terminology. Back in 1982, when the inaugural director of the (NIOST), Michelle Seligson, and her co-author, James Levine, wrote the first School Age Child Care: An Action Manual, their guiding premise was that 鈥渟olutions are really to be found at the community level, and that they can best be developed by mobilizing people with similar interests to help one another.鈥 The book emphasized a model of service delivery called 鈥渢he partnership鈥 between schools and other community groups and agencies. While it has taken decades to get here, there is promise in ELO if we can overcome previous barriers.


  • news logo Forbes.com August 26, 2011
    Leslie Bradshaw

  • Wyoming Business Report January 18, 2011
    MJ Clark
  • New Assessment Tool Provides Fresh Perspective on Afterschool Program Quality

    October 18, 2010

  • Feed Your Children Well

    Letter to the Editor submitted by Ellen Gannett, M.Ed., Georgia Hall, Ph.D., and Jean Wiecha, Ph.D., to Newsweek in response to the March 22, 2010 article, "Feed Your Children Well." (unpublished)
    April 2, 2010 

  • Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Funds NIOST Study on Physical Activity and Healthy Eating in Out-of-School Time Programs
    January 27, 2010
  • Update on Afterschool Matters

    In July, 2008 the Robert Bowne Foundation transferred the Afterschool Matters (ASM) initiative to the National Institute on Out-of-School Time (NIOST) at the 星空无限. The four components of this comprehensive initiative are: (1) the Practitioner Fellowship Program, which provides an inquiry-based year-long research and writing professional development experience for out-of-school-time practitioners; (2) the Afterschool Matters journal, which disseminates findings and experiences of the Practitioner Fellows and other relevant research from the out-of-school-time field; (3) the Edmund A. Stanley, Jr. Research Grantee program to foster high-quality, cutting-edge research that has lasting impact on the field; and (4) the Research Roundtables, periodic forums for connecting research and practice.
    NIOST鈥檚 goals in acquiring the ASM initiative include generating additional funding support to enable the national expansion of the initiative, and to ensure the sustainability of ASM into the future.


  • The National (Abu Dhabi, U.A.E.)
    Kathryn Lewis
    October 29, 2008


  • Education Week

    Catherine Gewertz
    September 24, 2008

  • Boston-area Youth Workers to Graduate with New Credential

    June 16, 2008

  • National Institute on Out-of-School Time Partners with nFocus Software on Youth Assessment

    April 29, 2008

  • $2.1 Million Awarded for 5-Year Afterschool Matters Initiative

    April 14, 2008


  • Education Week
    Linda Jacobson
    October 9, 2007

  • Still Stuck in Low Wage Jobs: Is It Time That We Solve the Youth Worker Compensation Problem?

    by Ellen S. Gannett, M.Ed.
    From the Spring/Summer 2007 Research & Action Report

    Afterschool practitioners and youth workers play a critical role in today鈥檚 society, serving as positive adult role models, mentors, coaches, tutors and friends for young people, and a vital support for working parents. Too often, however, these practitioners do not receive the recognition or resources they need to feel valued in their work by the public and, more importantly, by their employers. While most youth workers are educated, satisfied and committed to making a difference in the lives of the children and youth they serve, too many report being underpaid, underappreciated, and at times overworked, often holding down multiple jobs just to make a living wage. Stress and burnout are all too real and recruitment of qualified administrators and staff remains challenging. For our most vulnerable youth who depend on quality out-of-school time programs, it is imperative that private and public policy makers understand the domino effect that results from underpaid youth workers.


  • Youth Today
    Patrick Boyle
    March 2007

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