PPN Home > Partner Pages > Organizations > Hands On Mississippi

Sign up for PPN updates by email

Partner Pages for Organizations

Hands On Mississippi logo

Hands On Mississippi

Hands On Mississippi is a Mississippi-based nonprofit that mobilizes individuals to join together to address community needs, providing camaraderie as well as guidance through creating an impact with service. In partnership with the Corporation for National and Community Service, the Mississippi Commission on Volunteer Service, nonprofit agencies, and local community members and business partners, Hands On Mississippi supports the volunteer-driven recovery of the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina and actively rebuilds a more civically engaged community.

Hands On Mississippi has identified several priority issue areas for Mississippi. Additional topics will be added soon.


Community Partnerships
Education — Academic Achievement
Family Economic Security
Homelessness
Volunteerism
Other Resources


COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS

See PPN's Service Delivery section on Forming, Funding, and Maintaining Partnerships and Collaborations.

Back to topTop  

 

EDUCATION — ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT


Programs that Work


Students performing at grade level or meeting state curriculum standards 

Students graduating from high school 


Research in Brief


Academic Achievement topic area 

High School Graduation topic area 

Back to topTop  

 

FAMILY ECONOMIC SECURITY


Programs that Work


Families increasing economic self-sufficiency 


Research in Brief


Strong Families outcome area 

Back to topTop  

 

HOMELESSNESS


Research in Brief


Finding Shelter: Two-Year Housing Trajectories Among Homeless Youth — Dec. 2011

A Longitudinal Population-Based Study of Factors in Adolescence Predicting Homelessness in Young Adulthood — Dec. 2009

Prevalence, Characteristics, and Associated Health and Health Care of Family Homelessness Among Fifth-Grade Students — Aug. 2009

Predictors of Homelessness and Doubling-Up Among At Risk Families — Aug. 2008

Homelessness and Health Care Access After Emancipation — Oct. 2007

Back to topTop  

 

VOLUNTEERISM


Programs that Work


Across Ages

Big Brothers Big Sisters of America

Career Academies

CASASTART

Child-Parent Centers

Communities In Schools

Gang Resistance Education and Training (G.R.E.A.T.)

Guiding Good Choices

Leadership and Resiliency Program (LRP)

Let Each One Teach One Mentor Program

Midwestern Prevention Project/Project STAR

Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care

OSLC Treatment Foster Care

Project TRUST

Project Venture

Quantum Opportunity Program (QOP)

Teen Outreach Program

Twelve Together

Back to topTop  


Research in Brief


High School Mentors In Brief: Findings from the Big Brothers Big Sisters School-Based Mentoring Impact Study — Oct. 2009

Making a Difference? The Effects of Teach for America in High School — July 2008

Back to topTop  

 

OTHER RESOURCES


Association of Maternal Medical Conditions and Unfavorable Birth Outcomes: Findings from the 1996-2003 Mississippi Linked Birth and Death Data — Oct. 2011

Prenatal Care Utilization in Mississippi: Racial Disparities and Implications for Unfavorable Birth Outcomes — Oct. 2011

7th Annual AP Report to the Nation: State Supplement — Mississippi — Feb. 2011

New Orleans Five Years After the Storm: A New Disaster Amid Recovery — Aug. 2010

Children of Katrina: Lessons Learned About Postdisaster Symptoms and Recovery Patterns — July 2010

National Assessment of Educational Progress State Profiles — Mississippi — Mar. 2010

State Facts Sheets on Child Welfare Funding 2010 — Mississippi Profile — Jan. 2010

America's Youngest Outcasts: State Report Card on Child Homelessness — Mar. 2009

2009 State Fact Sheets: Mississippi's Children — 2009

The Health and Well-Being of Children: A Portrait of States and the Nation 2007 — Mississippi Profile — 2009

Diplomas Count 2008: Mississippi State Highlights — June 2008

2007 Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) — Comparison Between Mississippi Students and U.S. Students — 2008

State-Specific Data from State Tobacco Settlement — Dec. 2007

Reports from the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids

Reading Across the Nation: A Chartbook for Mississippi — Oct. 2007

Commonwealth Fund State Scorecard on Health System Performance, 2007: Mississippi Profile — June 2007

2007 National Survey of Children's Health — 2007

2005 State Preschool Yearbook: Mississippi Profile — Mar. 2006

Pulling Apart: A State-by-State Analysis of Income Trends — Jan. 2006

Pulling Apart: A State-by-State Analysis of Income Trends — Mississippi Fact Sheet — Jan. 2006

Measuring Up 2006: The State Report Card on Higher Education (Mississippi) — 2006

State Approaches to Promoting Young Children's Healthy Mental Development — Dec. 2005

Prekindergarteners Left Behind: Expulsion Rates in State Prekindergarten Programs — May 2005

Why Rural Matters 2005: Mississippi Results — May 2005

Annie E. Casey Online Databases — Mississippi 

The Annie E. Casey Foundation provides several online databases that allow people to create customized reports about children and about issues affecting children in different geographic areas. The links below provide information specific to Mississippi:

Kaiser Family Foundation's State Health Facts Online — Mississippi Profile 

The Kaiser Family Foundation's State Health Facts Online web site provides profiles of all 50 states and allows for comparison of information across all the states and compared to the country as a whole. The web site provides information on a state's demographic and economic profile; health care coverage; health status; participation and costs in the Medicaid, S-CHIP and Medicare programs; as well as health issues for specific groups (Minority Health, Women's Health, HIV/AIDS).

National Center for Children in Poverty — Mississippi Profiles 

The National Center for Children in Poverty provides access to state-specific data regarding demographics, economic conditions and child-related policies.

No Child Left Behind Database 

The Education Commission of the States offers the No Child Left Behind Database on their website. The database provides state-specific information about how states are meeting the No Child Left Behind requirements.

Back to topTop