A licensing specialist asks how staff ensure accountability during transitions from the cafeteria to the gym.
What are attendance tracking, name-to-face counts, and active supervision procedures?
The YMCA mission is to build these three things for all.
What are spirit, mind, and body?
The 45-hour curriculum teaches that behavior is a form of what?
What is communication?
A 10-year-old insists on making their own decisions during activities. This reflects growth in what developmental area?
What is autonomy or independence?
Inclusion means more than allowing a child to attend. It means ensuring they can do what?
What is participate meaningfully?
A child is signed in but cannot be located during an attendance check. What should occur immediately?
What is initiating missing-child procedures and notifying program leadership according to policy?
A child repeatedly excludes another child from activities. Which YMCA value should guide intervention first?
What is Respect?
School-age children often become highly concerned with rules, fairness, and justice. This reflects growth in what area?
What is social and moral development?
A group of children creates their own game and negotiates rules without adult help. What skills are being demonstrated?
What are problem-solving, cooperation, and executive functioning?
A child struggles in a competitive game. What should staff consider first?
What accommodations or modifications may support participation?
A staff member says, "I was in the room, so I was supervising." A licensing specialist disagrees. What key OCC concept is missing?
What is active supervision?
A youth admits they accidentally damaged equipment after everyone else denied involvement. Which YMCA value is demonstrated?
What is Honesty?
Positive youth development focuses on building assets rather than correcting what?
What are deficits?
Why is offering children choices considered a best practice in school-age programming?
Because it promotes autonomy, engagement, and responsibility.
The 45-hour curriculum encourages staff to focus on children's strengths rather than solely on what?
What are deficits or challenges?
During an inspection, a specialist asks how your program balances children's independence with safety requirements. What licensing principle is being assessed?
What is maintaining active supervision while supporting developmentally appropriate independence?
A staff member consistently volunteers to cover classrooms to maintain ratios and support coworkers. Which YMCA value is most evident?
What is Responsibility?
According to youth development principles, children are more likely to engage when they experience these three elements.
What are choice, challenge, and belonging?
A child appears socially advanced but struggles academically. What principle of development does this illustrate?
Development occurs at different rates across domains.
A child consistently avoids large-group activities. What should staff avoid assuming?
What is that the child is simply being noncompliant?
A licensing specialist observes teachers talking together while children are spread throughout a space. What supervision practice is likely missing?
What is active supervision through positioning, scanning, and engagement?
Why is it inaccurate to say YMCA values are simply behavior expectations?
Because they are intended to develop character, decision-making, relationships, and community impact.
According to youth development theory, the strongest predictor of positive outcomes in after-school programs is often not the activity itself but this.
What are positive relationships with caring adults?
A school-age professional's role is often described as being less of a director and more of what?
What is a facilitator?
True inclusion requires changing what when necessary: the child, the environment, or the program?
What are the environment and program?