Getting to ‘Y’ has been in the Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma for three years. They initially incorporated the program into their public health work to
Did you know that 95% of invited high schools in Vermont administer the Youth Risk Behavior Survey?
And Vermont has one of the highest participation rates. Yet, there is room for improvement.
UP for Learning and the Vermont Department of Health have created youth and adult-specific videos, posters, and social media posts to explain why the YRBS is important. Scroll to the bottom of the page to access these materials.
The Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) is a behavioral health survey developed and maintained by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to monitor health risk behaviors that contribute to the leading causes of death, disease, injury and social problems among youth.
The YRBS is administered in middle and high schools across the U.S. every two years. Since 1993, the Vermont Department of Health and Agency of Education have sponsored the YRBS in Vermont.
Educational leaders, public health professionals, policymakers, and youth all use the YRBS to better understand their schools and communities and design targeted actions to address areas of need.
The YRBS is next being administered in Vermont schools in early 2025.
Question: What percent of VT high school students do you think have tried vaping?
Answer: 32%
…Did you guess higher? Many people do. We bring our own lived experiences and other biases to our perceptions of youth behavior. The Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) helps educational leaders, public health professionals, policymakers, and youth see challenges more clearly and target action to help address them as they currently exist.
In the 2023-2024 school year, 42 school-based teams of youth and adults used YRBS data to create change in their communities through UP for Learning’s Getting to ‘Y’ program.
Did you know that 95% of invited high schools in Vermont administer the Youth Risk Behavior Survey?
And yet, just 66% of those students complete the survey.
Even if your school is already administering the survey, you can help!
How to help:
Getting to ‘Y’ has been in the Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma for three years. They initially incorporated the program into their public health work to
So far this year, Program Director Jesse Brooks has facilitated five Getting to ‘Y’ (GTY) trainings across Vermont, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts, half-day events in
At UP for Learning, we believe we all must play our part in uprooting and rebuilding the systems behind inequities.
For our part, we commit to continuing our work to become an inclusive, anti-racist organization and community. We commit to continuing to listen, change and grow.
Creative material developed by UP for Learning is protected under a Creative Commons Attribution- Non-Commercial 4.0 International License.
We strive to make our website accessible to all audiences, including those with disabilities.
For more information: [email protected]