Campus Corps is a 12-week early intervention mentoring program. It is designed to prevent futher involvement in juvenile justice, dropping out of school or serious behavioural health problems.
Campus Corps adopts a multi-level mentoring approach:
The multi-level structure is designed to promote youth’s connectedness and prosocial relationships. Mentor Families provide a prosocial network for youth to build relationships with other mentors and fellow mentees. They provide an opportunity for youth to build positive relationships with same-age peers and with other adults (in addition to their primary mentor).
Campus Corps (also known as Campus Connections) was developed at Colorado State University in 2009 and is licensed to other universities in Colorado and The University of Auckland, New Zealand.
Campus Corps is designed for youth aged 11-18 at risk of delinquency and substance abuse. Youth are classified 'at risk' if they have already committed an offence or if they meet one of six risk factors identified by the Arizona Needs/Risk Assessment.
This program has only been evaluted in the USA.
A quasi-experimental design study was conducted with 410 people (Weiler et al. 2015). Ages ranged from 11-18, with an average of 15 years old. Most of the sample were white (50.3%), followed by Hispanic (33.2%).
The program has not been evaluated in Australia or with Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander communities. It has also not been evaluated with culturally and linguistically diverse populations in Australia.
Campus Corps participants as compared with the control group experienced the following outcomes:
Overall, the program had a mixed effect on measured outcomes.
Mixed research evidence with no adverse effects:
Campus Corps includes 4-hour weekly meetings. In these meetings, mentors and mentees participate in:
Campus Corps program licences can be purchased and include training, support, and programmatic resources. Pricing is not listed on the Campus Corps website.
Mentors are undergraduate university students enrolled in a ‘service-learning’ course which includes mentor training, live supervision and ongoing support.
The multi-level structure of Campus Corps provides in-the-moment support and live supervison for mentors. Mentors are able to rely on fellow mentors and their Mentor Coach for support, advice and guidance.
The evaluation available of this program found that the relationship quality between mentor and mentee is central to the success of the intervention (Weiler et al., 2015).
1 QED study conducted in Colorado, USA with a sample of 410 youth (Weiler et al. 2015).
For more information about the Campus Corps program see: https://www.chhs.colostate.edu/cc/
For further qualitative analyses of Campus Corps, see: Haddock, SA, Zimmerman, TS, Thomas, AG, Weiler, MN, Krafchick, J & Fredrickson, G J 2017, ‘A Qualitative Analysis of Mentee Experiences in a Campus-Based Mentoring Program’, Journal of Youth Development, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 61-80, viewed 19 February, 2021, DOI 10.5195/jyd.2017.496
16 Feb 2022
We acknowledge Aboriginal people as the First Nations Peoples of NSW and pay our respects to Elders past, present, and future.
Informed by lessons of the past, Department of Communities and Justice is improving how we work with Aboriginal people and communities. We listen and learn from the knowledge, strength and resilience of Stolen Generations Survivors, Aboriginal Elders and Aboriginal communities.
You can access our apology to the Stolen Generations.