Saturday, April 12, 2014

 On the zero to three website I took some time to explore the link to the Military Families Project. This link is of interest to me as I am a Military brat myself.  I would imagine quality child care and consistency of program can be a challenge with frequent moving. Our family typically move every one to two years up until I reached junior high. My mother did not work so we did not take part in an early childhood program.
                The military family project is funded and developed with the help of the zero to three organization.  Recently the project provided training to caregivers who worked with military families. The training looked at ways in which caregivers can help children who face challenges unique to military families such assisting families with a deployed parent, helping children through the transition in moving and providing the consistency they need. The project also assists in helping veterans who have young children. With many veterans facing tribulation and mental challenges after deployment the young children of veterans are at risk. The program seeks to offer aide in any way it can from assisting in obtaining medical care to giving families a template in which they can write about the unique experience of their family to share with caregivers. There are many links to ongoing training in this area and information on how we can take part.

                The military family is actually trending this month on the site as April is the month of the military child. Last month’s issues trended on prenatal influences on development. This is interesting as researchers are beginning to look at autism as possibly developing prenatally.

4 comments:

  1. Hi Jennifer
    I also did Military Project on Zero to Three I was glad to see that a website focus on military and their families. I found some good information on this site that is helpful to families. thank you for share

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  2. Jennifer,
    I also chose the Zero to Three website but I chose to explore state specific information. I was aware of the inequity in my state but was very unaware of how large the problem is until I was able to check these facts out. I think this is a great website that is useful for everyone from educators to parents and everyone in between.

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  3. Jennifer,
    I am glad you were able to find such great information from your web resource. I also liked that it actually connected to you personally, seeing that you were in a child of someone in the military. This information they offer sounds awesome and very hands on to help support the family system.
    Thanks for sharing,
    Tierra

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  4. Jennifer,
    Thank you for sharing this information about the Military Family Project. In my area we service some military families due to our proximity to Fort Bragg. This information would be useful since we are not commonly affected by this issue and have little training. I remember as a toddler teacher, one of my toddler's parents was deployed to Afghanistan. It was a stressful time in his family's life and it showed in his behavior. I worked with him but unfortunately my co-teacher would not because she didn't believe that was the problem. She just thought he was a spoiled brat that needed more guidance. I could have used this information a few years ago! But thank you for sharing and I look forward to passing this to our providers that do service military families.
    Myra

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