Black capital letter "H" on a white background.
  • Untitled_Artwork-5

    Designing Activities

    What to do with youth once you bring them all together. (This chapter is a gold mine.)

  • Untitled_Artwork-6

    Facilitation

    Every group – heck, every moment – is different. Here’s how to set the tone and maintain it.

Center for Digital Thriving

Hopelab

Character Lab

In Tandem

Have you ever thought something like:

Well, I finished my project…

…check that off that list!

I wonder if those teens will care…

…what I did with that feedback.

Wow! That was a HUGE success!

Who should I thank or tell about it?

Chapter 9: Closing and Sharing the Project

If so, this chapter is for you.

One note: doing this well means you might have to actually DO the things that young people told you to do, and then show them what you changed… and even let them give you more feedback on your new version. It might even convince you to engage young people in the next stage of your project too, which is a good thing!

Closing the loop with youth

First up, circle back.

The youth that participated in the session are likely very excited to hear about takeaways and the ways their input changed your project! Make a plan to follow-up with your finished product, next steps, or at least to share in the final session how their insights have shifted your thinking and understanding. The more tangible, the better, although this can also be informal, like simply sharing out loud something like “Some of the ways our thinking has evolved based on what you’ve shared are…” More examples of how to do this can be found in chapter 7 and chapter 8.

Fact check your quotes.

Make sure quotes are accurate and you have permission to share them. If you plan to use stories, quotes, or explicit insights from your young people, make sure you let them review those to be sure you are accurately representing their words and experiences. You should also ask them if they want to remain anonymous or use a self-selected pseudonym. Keep in mind, the nature of your IRB (if applicable) might stipulate if or how you can reach out to participants and what you can share publicly from them, so be sure to check that first.

Example from Center for Digital Thriving

It’s okay to share a draft.

At this stage, your project might not be totally finished, and that is okay! The step of “closing the loop” is not to show the finished product or project, but rather to show the insights you garnered from your session with youth. This doesn’t have to be super formal. For example, if you asked for feedback on an early survey, you can consider showing tracked changes from before and after youth input; bonus points if you highlight specific areas of the project that your youth changed! If you engaged in a codesign session for an early product prototype, you can show the before and after experiences through a series of screengrabs, highlighting key changes that were informed by youth. This is a valuable way to strive for collaborative work and avoid extractive approaches.. You might be opening yourself to more feedback – and that is the point! Even if you can’t integrate further changes right now, you might find those comments useful for your discussion section, your next study, or other future projects.

Example from Hopelab

Example from Hopelab

Example from Center for Digital Thriving

Example from Hopelab

Example from Center for Digital Thriving

Example from Character Lab

Example from Character Lab

Resources, activities, and digging deeper

Stepping stones

Another shout-out to these great YPAR resources from UC Davis! In particular, stepping stone 8 is super relevant to the content of this chapter.

Guide to participatory dissemination

This manual from Spaces & Places shares some incredible tips and examples of how to position young people to share the findings of research they were part of, and also makes some important points about the value of doing so (especially on pages 3-4). Check it out!

Example of public acknowledgement

Here’s a way to share about your youth advisors and their involvement after a project concludes. (Note: this example is not from one of our organizations, and we don’t necessarily recommend sharing this level of identifiable information about your participating youth, but if you have permission, it’s a really cool way to give them credit for their work.)

What to Read Next

Wow. You’ve made it to the end of your project – and the end of this playbook! We hope it’s been a useful companion along the journey. We also hope that your experience doing research with young people has been a great one, and that reaching the finish line of this project has you excited to get to the starting line of the next one! So with that, let’s jump back to the beginning and begin again. 🙂

Chapter 2
2

Keeping Young People Safe

Let’s stop for a second to think through ethical and regulatory considerations – these need to be on your radar before you invite a bunch of young people to come hang out at your team’s office.

Jump to this Chapter
Chapter 3
3

Budgets and Resources

Let’s turn our attention to another elephant in the room: paying for everything you just planned out.

Jump to this Chapter
Chapter 4
4

Recruitment

Let’s get to the fun part – actually inviting young people to join you in the project you’re planning.

Jump to this Chapter
Chapter 5
5

Designing Activities

Let’s figure out how you’re going to structure your time together to maximize what you can learn from them.

Jump to this Chapter
Chapter 6
6

Facilitation

Let’s learn how to set the tone when they first arrive, and invite them to join you in this experience you’ve planned.

Jump to this Chapter
Chapter 7
7

Documentation

Let’s discuss how to document the rich insight you’ll get during your session, and how to reflect on the session once it is over.

Jump to this Chapter
Chapter 8
8

Sensemaking

Let’s tackle making sense of the input, insight, and feedback you received during your session.

Jump to this Chapter

References

  • Shamrova, D. P. & Cummings, C. E. (2017).

    Participatory action research (PAR) with children and youth: An integrative review of methodology and PAR outcomes for participants, organizations, and communities. Children and Youth Services Review, 81: 400-412.

  • United Nations. (1989).

    Convention on the Rights of the Child. Treaty Series, 1577, 3.

Character Lab, Hopelab, & Center for Digital Thriving. (2024). Youth Voice Playbook: Engaging Youth in Research. Cambridge, MA, USA: Center for Digital Thriving.

Privacy Policy   |   Accessibility Policy