Strengthening Families: An Effective Approach to Supporting Families.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is a School Psychologist? ©2008, National Association of School Psychologists A Guide for Teachers-in-Training.
Advertisements

Implementing SFI in your ECE Program
Strengthening Military Families: Opportunities for Commanders.
Have this on screen while trainees enter training room.
SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGISTS Helping children achieve their best. In school. At home. In life. National Association of School Psychologists.
Common Ground One Approach, Many Adaptations Judy Langford June 2011.
Five Protective Factors
The Network To come together to transform the partnerships among families, community and service providers to do everything possible to promote strong,
Introduction to Strengthening Families: An Effective Approach to Supporting Families Massachusetts Home Visiting Initiative A Department of Public Health.
Preventing child abuse and neglect: the early childhood educator’s role.
Developed by the Center for the Study of Social Policy Funded by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.
STRENGTHENING FAMILIES National Briefing, 2012.
Strengthening Families through Early Care and Education Columbia, SC October 14, 2006.
Common Ground One Approach, Many Adaptations Juanita Blount-Clark August, 2011.
School-Based Psychological Services
Developmentally Appropriate Practices (DAP)
Strengthening Families through Home Visiting. What we’ll cover today Overview of Strengthening Families Overview of the Protective Factors Framework Connections.
The Revised Strengthening Families Self-Assessments: What’s Different?
SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGISTS: Helping children achieve their best. In school. At home. In life. © 2003 National Association of School Psychologists.
Using Protective Factors to Strengthen Families
This is what it’s all about…
10 Early Childhood Program Standards. Relationships  Promote positive relationships with all parents and children.  Children’s learning is encouraged.
Understanding the Strengthening Families Protective Factors.
Strengthening Families: An Effective Approach to Supporting Families.
Center for Schools and Communities. What you’ll learn  Five protective factors and how they relate to prevention of child abuse and neglect  Ways to.
Caring Communities Can Help Reduce ACEs. Mental Health “Mental health is indispensable to well-being, relationships, and contribution to the community.
Leo R. Sandy and Scott R. Meyer.  a parent’s capacity for resilience can affect how a parent deals with stress. Resilience is the ability to manage and.
California Parenting Institute Strengthening Families by Building Protective Factors MAY 2011 Grace Harris, Director of Programs
OPERATION Life Online Protective factors against suicide There are many factors in our lives that can help to protect us and others against suicide.
that keep families strong
MOVING UPSTREAM By BUILDING PROTECTIVE FACTORS
Family Connections Fostering positive interactions for families facing adversity in Early Head Start & Head Start Centers families facing adversity in.
Foundation module 7 Psychosocial support.
Building Resiliency in Children: A Parent’s Guide Presented by Military & Family Life Counselors.
Strengthening Families Protective Factors Hays Kansas Kansas State Coordinators’ Meeting Nancy Keel, MS Ed, P-3 National Trainer Executive Director Kansas.
SCHOOL COUNSELING "Helping children to become all that they are capable of being." Created by Tammy P. Roth, MEd Licensed School Counselor.
Early Help Strategy Achieving better outcomes for children, young people and families, by developing family resilience and intervening early when help.
Community Support Systems The most appropriate resource for a family in crisis depends on the seriousness of the problem. Sometimes families must turn.
A D A P T E D F R O M T H E C E N T E R F O R T H E S T U D Y O F S O C I A L P O L I C Y & T H E W I S C O N S I N C H I L D R E N ‘ S T R U S T F U N.
Child Development 7.  Home and school are a young child’s two most important worlds  If home and school are connected in positive and respectful ways,
Frances Blue. “Today’s young people are living in an exciting time, with an increasingly diverse society, new technologies and expanding opportunities.
Massachusetts Home Visiting Initiative A Department of Public Health led state agency collaborative Introduction to Social.
Funded by SAMHSA through the Garrett Lee Smith Campus Suicide Prevention Grant Program Cohort 1 and Cohort 3 ASU Campus Care
Minnesota’s Strengthening Families Minnesota Department of Human Services Ready 4 K’s Build Initiative.
Presentation Title (Master View) Edward G. Rendell, Governor | Dr. Gerald L. Zahorchak, Secretary of Education | Estelle G. Richman, Secretary of Public.
Strengthening Families Protective Factors Applying the Results Topeka, Kansas Kansas State Coordinators’ Meeting Nancy Keel, MS Ed, P-3 National Trainer.
Parents with learning disabilities
Planning an improved prevention response in middle childhood Ms. Melva Ramirez UNODC Regional Office for Central America and the Caribbean.
Presented by Robin Castle, MA Child Sexual Abuse Prevention Manager The Strengthening Families Approach in Action : An Overview The Strengthening Families.
Family Advocates Home Visiting Program. Mission Strengthen families and communities so they can be safe, healthy and thriving. We do this by providing.
533: Building a Trauma-Informed Culture in Child Welfare.
Children grow up in a safe and supportive environment Families are stronger and healthier, leading to greater success and personal development for children.
Making Small but Significant Changes. Learning Objectives Upon completion of this module participants will be able to: Understand how protective factors.
Trauma-Informed Design
Center For The Study of Social Policy’s Strengthening Families A Protective Factors Framework Strengthening Families Goodwin College.
Common Core Parenting: Best Practice Strategies to Support Student Success Core Components: Successful Models Patty Bunker National Director Parenting.
ABC’s of A Healthy Me: Partnering with Families to Support Healthy Habits 1 Catherine Stafford & Lauren Brightwell Contra Costa Child Care Council.
Family-Based Multilevel Development of Early Childhood Resilience : An Effort to Support the Friendly City for Children Ari Pratiwi Psychology – FISIP.
Dedicated to Empowering Parents and Nurturing Children.
1 Core Competencies for Primary School Teachers in Crisis Contexts.
Early Childhood Program Accountability: Cross Walks Between Strengthening Families, Head Start Performance Standards and NAEYC Accreditation standards.
Early & Appropriate Interventions for Child Abuse Prevention Nicole Huff, LCSW Chief Programs Officer ESCAPE Family Resource Center.
Office of Global Health and HIV (OGHH) Office of Overseas Programming & Training Support (OPATS) Health Child Development – We All Play A Role.
The Strengthening Families Approach Applying the Protective Factors Framework.
January 26, 2016 Preventing Child Abuse & Neglect: It’s Essential - and Possible August 26, 2016 North Carolina State Collaborative.
2017 Conference on Child Welfare and the Courts
Concrete support in times of need
NAEYC Early Childhood Standards
Applying Critical Thinking in Child Welfare
Building Stronger Families Protective Factors framework
Presentation transcript:

Strengthening Families: An Effective Approach to Supporting Families

Goals Understand the key elements of the Strengthening Families Five Protective factors – a foundation for programs that support families. Identify ways that your programs are already supporting the development of protective factors in the families you serve. Consider how your programs can help families build protective factors through implementing “seven key strategies.”

What is Strengthening Families? Developed by the Center for the Study of Social Policy An approach to working with families based on evidence that when five key protective factors are present: We can prevent child abuse, AND We can promote optimal healthy growth and development of children.

Strengthening Families Protective Factors Five protective factors that have common sense appeal while being well grounded in evidence. Shift focus from family deficits to family strengths and resiliency. Promote a wide understanding of what programs can do (or are already doing) to promote healthy child development and strong families. Create a common language and approach in communities and community organizations.

Five Protective Factors Parental resilience Social connections Concrete support in times of need Knowledge of parenting and child development Social and emotional competence of children

Parental Resilience The ability to cope and bounce back from all kinds of challenges. Building parental resilience can affect how a parent deals with stress. Involves creatively solving problems, building trusting relationships, maintaining a positive attitude, and seeking help when needed. Resilience develops within the context of trusting relationships. “Be strong and flexible”

Social Connections Friends, family, neighbors and other members of a community provide emotional support and concrete assistance to parents. Addresses social isolation…a key risk factor related to child abuse and neglect. Positive social connections: Reinforce positive norms about parenting. Provide assistance in times of need. Serve as a resource for parenting information or help solving problems. “Parents need friends”

Concrete Support in Times of Need Parents need access to the types of supports and services that can minimize the stress of difficult situations, such as a family crisis, a condition such as substance abuse, or stress associated with lack of resources. Ensuring the basic needs of a family are met (food, clothing, shelter). Connecting families to services particularly those that may feel more difficult to accept (domestic violence, substance abuse counseling, mental health, etc.). “We all need help sometimes”

Knowledge of Parenting and Child Development Having accurate information about raising children and appropriate expectations for their behavior helps parents better understand and care for their children. It is important that information is available when parents need it and that it is relevant to their lives. Parents whose own families used harsh discipline techniques or parents of children with developmental or behavioral challenges or special needs often require extra information and support. Parents are more able to learn from people they trust and feel respected by, particularly when they are struggling. Parents learn by education, modeling, and coaching. “Parenting is part natural, part learned”

Social and Emotional Competence of Children A child’s ability to interact positively with others, self-regulate, and effectively community his or her emotions has a great impact on the parent-child relationship. Challenging behaviors increase the risk for abuse…working with children early to keep their development on track helps keep them safe. Children who have greater social and emotional competence have more positive interactions and can put their feelings into words rather than behaviors which helps parents be more responsive and less likely to yell and hit. Rich programs of early education and care provide added benefits in this area. “Children connect and relate to their world”

Group Activity How can our programs promote these protective factors What do we already do? What could we consider doing?

Program Strategies Support the development of protective factors by: Facilitating friendships and mutual support Strengthening parenting Responding to family crises Linking families to services and opportunities Valuing and supporting parents Facilitating children’s social and emotional development Observing and responding to early warning signs of abuse or neglect

How do we implement the seven strategies? Strategy Cards Activity

Strategies in Action “The Faces of Families”

Conversations With Parents What’s hard about being a parent? Are there ways our staff could help you deal with those challenges? We want this to be a welcoming place where families feel comfortable asking for help. What are some of your ideas about how we can do that? We are particularly concerned when parents seemed stressed, isolated, or overwhelmed. Do you have ideas about how we can reach out to parents during those times? We want to make it easy for parents to make connections with each other. How can we do that?

Conversations With Staff What are we already doing to build protective factors? What could we do? How might this affect our work? What would be the benefits? What would be the difficulties? How might building protective factors impact parents and how parents relate to their children? How might building protective factors impact the parents we are most concerned about?

Where to Start? How helpful would this change or action be to all families? How helpful would it be to families that staff are most concerned about? How easily could it be done without creating new burdens for staff?

Comments, Questions and Discussion

for your kind attention and active participation! Thank You

ECI Learning Community Resources This PowerPoint is part of a series of resources developed by the It is available at no cost. To see the full array of resources, please visit the Alliance web site at projects

Collaborating Partners NATIONAL ALLIANCE of CHILDREN’S TRUST & PREVENTION FUNDS Early Childhood Initiative (ECI) and Massachusetts Children’s Trust Fund Thanks for the generous support of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation

Martha Reeder, D.A. Director, Early Childhood Initiative projects or contact us at: Contact Information