AG HEALEY, GE FOUNDATION COMMIT ADDITIONAL $600,000
TO YOUTH PREVENTION EDUCATION PROGRAM, MAKE RESOURCES MORE ACCESSIBLE AND
INCLUSIVE
Project Here’s Programming for Social Emotional Learning and
Healthy Decision-Making Increasingly Important for Young People Amid Ongoing
COVID-19 Pandemic
BOSTON
– Attorney General Maura Healey and the GE Foundation today
announced an additional $600,000 has been committed to Project Here, a
public-private collaboration to make substance use prevention education
available to all public middle schools in Massachusetts. The AG’s Office and
the GE Foundation, in collaboration with FableVision Studios, have also
launched new updates to make the program’s educational app, Project Here Games,
more accessible and inclusive, including translating the app into Spanish and
adding more content focused on cultural responsiveness.
“Project
Here’s resources on social emotional learning and skill-building, including
healthy ways to cope with stress, are increasingly important and relevant as
young people are dealing with social isolation, stress and anxiety during
COVID-19,” said AG Healey. “We are grateful to the GE Foundation for
their continued support of this program and are excited to unveil updates to
Project Here Games that will make them more relevant, effective, and accessible
for students.”
“We’re proud to continue this
important and impactful partnership with AG Healey on Project Here and help our
youth navigate the new and unique challenges they face today,” said David
Barash, Executive Director, GE Foundation. “By making this new investment
together, we are helping middle schoolers practice healthy decision-making,
create positive interpersonal relationships, develop social-emotional skills,
and prevent substance use before it starts.”
Designed to tackle a
significant unmet need for prevention education in the state’s battle against
the ongoing opioid crisis, Project Here was announced in May 2017 by the AG’s
Office and the GE Foundation to promote social
emotional learning and empower students to make healthy decisions through an
innovative combination of curricula, digital content, and support for educators
and students.
The additional $600,000 commitment
announced today brings the total investment to $2.6 million and will help fund
the program over the next few years. To date, more than 361 schools have
registered for Project Here and are accessing its resources. More than 500
educators have received training and technical assistance on how to use Project
Here’s resources and best practices in substance use prevention. Project Here
has also provided nearly $450,000 in grant funding to schools and districts to
implement evidence-based curricula.
Project Here Games, a first-of-its-kind
web-based education app announced in September 2018 and developed for Project
Here
by FableVision Studios, provides an innovative and engaging digital experience
to teach students about healthy choices, peer pressure, substance use and
coping with stress. Through games, quizzes, and scenarios, students gain
practical skills to navigate challenging situations and make healthy decisions
now and for the future.
Today, the AG’s Office is unveiling important
updates to the app to make it more accessible and inclusive, with a focus on
cultural responsiveness. Those updates include translating the entire app into
Spanish and adding a “read aloud” feature, in English and Spanish, for students
who read below grade level and/or who are English-language learners. The updated version also includes new
scenarios developed with an equity lens, which include content on racial and
socioeconomic microaggressions.
The new updates also allow teachers and
students to log in and play Project Here Games using their Google Classrooms
accounts. Project Here Games is available for
free on computers, tablets, and smart phones and has the flexibility to be used
by teachers as an in-classroom activity or by students outside of school. In February 2019, Project Here Games was
selected as a 2019
Parents’ Choice Gold Award winner for its “skillfully
designed” content and thought-provoking hypothetical scenarios for allowing
children to consider how different actions can have different outcomes.
Young people are
particularly vulnerable to the risks of substance use. Ninety percent of all
adults struggling with addiction started using when they were under the age of
18, and 50 percent were under the age of 15. Studies have shown that effective
substance use education and prevention programming can significantly decrease
the risk of substance use among young people.
People can learn
more information and schools can register for Project Here, which provides
access to the Online Toolkit and support for Project Here Games, at www.projectherema.org. Project Here
Games is available at www.projectheregames.org.
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