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Published: 17 April 2022 17 April 2022

As Many Youth Cope with Anxiety and Depression, New Mexico Parents Recognize that Afterschool Programs Support Recovery and Wellness

Washington, D.C. – Most New Mexico parents see afterschool programs as part of the solution to the social and mental health struggles so many students are experiencing right now, with 9 in 10 saying these programs give students time to engage with peers and reduce unproductive screen time, and 6 in 7 saying they help build confidence. That is according to Promoting Healthy Futures: Afterschool Provides the Supports Parents Want for Children’s Well-Being, a household survey released today by the Afterschool Alliance. 

Afterschool programs are especially important now, as the country faces a youth mental health crisis. In December, the U.S. Surgeon General issued a sobering warning about the mental health of America’s youth, warning that rates of anxiety, depression, and sadness rose dramatically during the pandemic. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) just reported that 4 in 10 high school students report feeling “persistently sad or hopeless” and 1 in 5 have contemplated suicide. The CDC noted that “school connectedness” is a protective factor for youth facing mental health challenges.

The household survey the Afterschool Alliance released today includes responses from more than 31,000 U.S. parents of school-age children, including 462 in New Mexico. It was conducted by Edge Research in 2020. It shows that parents see afterschool and summer learning programs as a pivotal support young people need. Seventy-three percent of New Mexico parents of afterschool students report the program helps their child learn responsible decision-making and 89% report it helps their child build positive relationships with caring adults and mentors. 

“Here in New Mexico, afterschool programs have been stepping up to meet the challenges students and families are facing by checking in with students during remote learning, taking students on virtual and actual field trips, providing counseling and other supports, collaborating to develop home learning activities to be distributed with take-home meals, and more,” said May Sagbakken, Executive Director of the NMOST Network (New Mexico Out of School Time). “We are pleased that this study finds that large majorities of New Mexico parents recognize the tremendous supports that out-of-school-time programs provide. Our recently completed afterschool mapping project clearly shows that we need to do even more to ensure that all students in New Mexico have access to afterschool programs. Right now, the unmet demand is great.” 

“Afterschool and summer learning programs offer critically important opportunities for students to engage with their peers, learn life skills, and build positive relationships with caring adults and mentors,” said Afterschool Alliance Executive Director Jodi Grant. “But too many young people are missing out. For every child in an afterschool program in our country today, three more are waiting to get in. The families of 24.6 million children — more than ever before — are unable to access a program. There are significant inequities, with Black and Latino children among those most likely to be unable to access the afterschool programs their parents want for them. We need to make it possible for all students to participate in afterschool programs, which help them build the resilience, hope, and connectedness they need to succeed.”

The New Mexico findings from Promoting Healthy Futures largely mirror the national findings, which include:

The full national and New Mexico study, America After 3PM, and accompanying data, are available at www.afterschoolalliance.org

Data from this special report is based on the 2020 America After 3PM survey results, which was made possible with support from the New York Life Foundation, Overdeck Family Foundation, The Wallace Foundation, the S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation, Altria Group, and the Walton Family Foundation, as well as the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation.

America After 3PM is a nationally representative survey of randomly selected adults who live in the United States and are the parent or guardian of a school-age child who lives in their household. The survey was conducted using a blend of national consumer panels. America After 3PM data included in this report were collected between January 27 and March 17, 2020. A total of 31,055 households were surveyed. Interviews were conducted in both English and Spanish. Data from interviews are weighted on race and income within state and by state population. The overall margin of error for child-level and household-level data is +/- < 1 percent.