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The Children First Initiative started
in St. Louis Park. The initiative was developed by and for
St. Louis Park and has currently spread to over 450
communities in the United States.
The Children First concept took shape in 1992 when Dr. Carl
Holstrom, the Superintendent of the St. Louis Park public
schools, gave what he thought was a routine talk to the St.
Louis Park Rotary Club. The gist of Dr. Holstrom’s talk was
that schools worked when there is a partnership between
schools and families. As more and more families became
stressed and dysfunctional, kids were lost and the community
suffered. He concluded that we needed to invest more of our
time and ourselves in the children and youth.
These Rotary talks were routine and generally soon
forgotten, but this time someone was listening. Within days
a retired businessman and fellow Rotarian, Wayne Packard,
offered a Asst. amount of money to solve the problem. Within
a month another Rotarian, Gil Braun, offered to match
Packard’s contribution. The problem was that Dr. Holstom did
not have a plan that he felt would accomplish the needed
results. A committee was formed to develop a solution
without results and the Search Institute, a non profit youth
research organization was brought on board.
The Search Institute headed by Peter Benson, had identified
30 (later 40) assets that serve as building blocks for
positive student improvement. Students with the most number
of these assets achieve the most. These assets served as the
framework for the Children First initiative. An unsuccessful
search was conducted nation wide to find a model for the
program. St. Louis Park turned out to be the first and had
to develop the basics. What developed was a community wide
plan to increase the assets in every child.
The Search Institute's 40 assets cover the following
categories: Support, Empowerment, Boundaries and
expectations, Time use, Educational commitment, Values,
Social competencies, and Positive identification.
The initial push for the program came from the community,
but once it got started the “village” embraced it with
passionately. When the first steering committee meeting was
held the following people showed up: School Superintendent,
Retired Asst. Superintendent, School Board Members, State
Representative, Mayor, Students, Retired Citizens, State
Senator, Chief of Police Rabbi, Ministers, Head Librarian,
Health Department Staff, Boy Scout Staff, YMCA Staff,
Judges, Hospital Foundation President, and Community
Education Director.
The initiative became a partnership of public and private
schools, students, health and business communities, service
organizations, the city, and the faith community. Thousands
of St. Louis Park residents were and are enthusiastically
involved in asset building for the youth of the city.
Initially when the children were tested they averaged 16.7
assets per child. In the latest tests this has increased to
19.4. Overall evaluation by the Search Institute indicates
the program is working.
Children First is not a government funded program. The only
paid employee is the Coordinator, Karen Atkinson. Her job is
to spread the “good news” about people who are helping build
assets so other people start asset building on their own.
The Children First story is documented in a book written
by Robert Ramsey Ed. E. The book is available for $10.00
plus $3.50 for mailing and handling from: Karen Atkinson,
Children First Coordinator 6425 West 33rd St., St Louis Park
MN 55426, 952- 928- 6075.
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