Home
Advertise with
Safer Child
Search
Parenting Blog
Education Blog

Donations

Abductions

Abuse/Neglect

ADD/ADHD

Adoption

Advertisements

Advocacy & Statistics

Biotech in Food

Breastfeeding

Bullying

Car Safety Seats

Consumer Issues

Crisis Pregnancy

Communication

Daycare/Babysitters

Dehydration

Dental/Oral Care

Discipline

Divorce Issues

Domestic Violence

Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco

Ear Infections

Eating Disorders

Education

Exceptional Children

Expert Voices

Families in Crisis

Finance

First Aid/ CPR/Poison

Foster Care/ Adoption

General Guidance

General Safety

Grief

Guns & Kids

Health

Homelessness

Idaho

Immunizations

International Aid

Internet Safety

Just for Fun

Literacy

Media & Kids

Medical

Mental Distress

Morality & Ethics

New on the Site

New Parents

Nutrition & Diet

Parents in Uniform

Parents of Teens

Poison Control

Pollution/Conservation

Postpartum Depression

Personal Attacks

Runaways

Safety

Seasonal

Self-Assessment

Sex Offenders

Sexuality & Kids

SIDS

Sleep Issues

Sports Safety

Substance Abuse

Suicide Prevention

Support for Parents

Teach your Child

Teenagers

Terrorism

Toilet Training

Transportation

Traveling

Violence & Kids

Washington State

Working Parents

 

 
Expert Voices - Search Institute  

Search Institute is an independent, nonprofit, nonsectarian organization whose mission is to advance the well-being of adolescents and children by generating knowledge and promoting its application. To accomplish this mission, the institute generates, synthesizes, and communicates new knowledge, convenes organizational and community leaders, and works with state and national organizations. The Institute has given us permission to reprint the Forty Developmental Assets.

Forty Developmental Assets

Through extensive research, Search Institute has identified the following 40 building blocks of healthy development that help young people grow up healthy, caring, and responsible.

The asset definitions shown in this chart are based on research on adolescents (6th to 12th grades). In addition, Search Institute has blended the literature on child development with the framework of assets for adolescents to identify parallel, developmentally appropriate sets of assets for toddlers, preschoolers, and elementary-age children.

Note: Developmental assets = Elementos fundamentales del desarrollo: To view the 40 developmental assets in Spanish, click here.

Asset Type Asset Name & Definition

EXTERNAL ASSETS
Support Family support Family life provides high levels of love and support.
Positive family communication Young person and her or his parent(s) communicate positively, and young person is willing to seek advice and counsel from parent(s).
Other adult relationships Young person receives support from three or more nonparent adults.
Caring neighborhood Young person experiences caring neighbors.
Caring school climate School provides a caring, encouraging environment.
Parent involvement in schooling Parent(s) are actively involved in helping young person succeed in school.

Empowerment Community values youth Young person perceives that adults in the community value youth.
Youth as resources Young people are given useful roles in the community.
Service to others Young person serves in the community one hour or more per week.
Safety Young person feels safe at home, at school, and in the neighborhood.

Boundaries and Expectations Family boundaries Family has clear rules and consequences, and monitors the young person's whereabouts.
School boundaries School provides clear rules and consequences.
Neighborhood boundaries Neighbors take responsibility for monitoring young people's behavior.
Adult role models Parent(s) and other adults model positive, responsible behavior.
Positive peer influence Young person's best friends model responsible behavior.
High expectations Both parent(s) and teachers encourage the young person to do well.

Constructive Use 
of Time
Creative activities Young person spends three or more hours per week in lessons or practice in music, theater, or other arts.
Youth programs Young person spends three or more hours per week in sports, clubs, or organizations at school and/or in community organizations.
Religious community Young person spends one hour or more per week in activities in a religious institution.
Time at home Young person is out with friends "with nothing special to do" two or fewer nights per week.

INTERNAL ASSETS
Commitment to Learning Achievement motivation Young person is motivated to do well in school.
School engagement Young person is actively engaged in learning.
Homework Young person reports doing at least one hour of homework every school day.
Bonding to school Young person cares about her or his school.
Reading for pleasure Young person reads for pleasure three or more hours per week.

Positive Values Caring Young person places high value on helping other people.
Equality and social justice Young person places high value on promoting equality and reducing hunger and poverty.
Integrity Young person acts on convictions and stands up for her or his beliefs.
Honesty Young person "tells the truth even when it is not easy."
Responsibility Young person accepts and takes personal responsibility.
Restraint Young person believes it is important not to be sexually active or to use alcohol or other drugs.

Social Competencies Planning and decision making Young person knows how to plan ahead and make choices.
Interpersonal competence Young person has empathy, sensitivity, and friendship skills.
Cultural competence Young person has knowledge of and comfort with people of different cultural/racial/ethnic backgrounds.
Resistance skills Young person can resist negative peer pressure and dangerous situations.
Peaceful conflict resolution Young person seeks to resolve conflict nonviolently.

Positive Identity Personal power Young person feels he or she has control over "things that happen to me."
Self-esteem Young person reports having a high self-esteem.
Sense of purpose Young person reports that "my life has a purpose."
Positive view of personal future Young person is optimistic about her or his personal future.


Developmental assets = Elementos fundamentales del desarrollo: To view the 40 developmental assets in Spanish, click here.

This list is an educational tool. It is not intended to be nor is it appropriate as a scientific measure of the developmental assets of individuals.

Copyright © 2000 by Search Institute. All rights reserved. This chart may be reproduced for educational, noncommercial use only (with this copyright line). No other use is permitted without prior permission from Search Institute, 700 S. Third Street, Suite 210, Minneapolis, MN 55415; 800-888-7828. See Search Institute’s Permissions Guidelines and Request Form.

Go to Top

Home Advertisements Feedback Advocacy Search Donations

Safer Child, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) charitable organization with federal tax-exempt status. Please note: 1) External organizations listed herein do not necessarily endorse Safer Child positions, nor do we necessarily endorse theirs. We list them as a courtesy and aren't responsible for their accuracy, completeness or content. 2) We recommend you maintain a healthy skepticism when reviewing information on the Internet; it might appear to be reliable --  yet actually be false, misleading, incomplete, out-of-date and/or intentionally harmful. 3) There might be material on the Internet that you disagree with or find objectionable; preview all sites before viewing them with your child. 4) We are not responsible for external addresses/phone numbers changing without our knowledge. 5) The information and commentary on this site are not substitutes for professional advice from your doctor, lawyer, or mental health professional. 6) Requests for permission to republish, copy and/or distribute any material found on this Web site should be directed to Safer Child, Inc.

This Web site is supported by donated services from SISNA of Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho,
and has received a grant from the Wendell P. & Barbara J. Marshall Family Trust in the Idaho Community Foundation.
Safer Child is also supported by Time4Learning.com, online education from preschool through middle school,
and LOCKSAF, manufacturer of biometric gun safes that "provide quick access with foolproof security for firearms and other valuables." (Enter the discount code "saferchild15" when you purchase a PBS-001 and receive 15% off the manufacturer's suggested retail price and 10% will be donated to Safer Child, Inc.)

Copyright 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Safer Child, Inc. All rights reserved.