Predictors of Treatment Engagement in Ethnically Diverse,
Urban Children Receiving Treatment for Trauma Exposure Fraynt, Ross, Baker, Rystad, Lee, & Briggs (2014) Journal of Traumatic Stress View Abstract Presents a study that examined whether racial / ethnic disparities exist in treatment duration and completion in minority children seeking treatment for trauma exposure from a child abuse prevention and treatment agency in southern California.
Not exact matches
Agencies
receiving Operation Primetime funding in 2014 include: Access of WNY; Be-A-Friend Program (Big Brothers Big Sisters); Blossom Garden Friends School; Boys & Girls Clubs of Buffalo, Holland, East Aurora, Eden, Orchard Park, and the Northtowns; Buffalo
Urban League; Canisius College;
Child & Adolescent Treatment Services;
Child & Adolescent Treatment Services (Detention); City of Lackawanna; Community Action Organization; Cradle Beach Camp; Elim Community Corp.; Erie Regional Housing Dev.
Agencies
receiving Operation Primetime funding in 2012 include: Access of WNY, African American Cultural Center, Back to Basics, Be A Friend, Bob Lanier Center, Boys & Girls Club of East Aurora, Boys & Girls Club of Eden, Boys & Girls Club of Holland, Boys & Girls Club of the Northtowns, Buffalo Museum of Science, Buffalo Prep, Buffalo
Urban League, Butler Mitchell Association,
Child & Adolescent Treatment Services, Community Action Organization, Computers for
Children, Concerned Ecumenical Ministries, Cradle Beach Camp, Elim Community Corporation, Erie Regional Housing Development Corp. — Belle Center, Firsthand Learning, FLARE, Girls Sports Foundation, Greater Niagara Frontier Council — Boy Scouts, Jericho Road Ministries, Justice Lifeline, King
Urban Life Center, Lackawanna Sports & Education, Making Fishers of Men & Women, National Inner City Youth Opportunities, North Buffalo CDC, Northwest Buffalo Community Center, Old First Ward Community Association, PBBC Matt
Urban Center, Peace of the City, Police Athletic League, Schiller Park Community Center, Seneca Babcock Community Association, Seneca Street Community Development, Town of Tonawanda Recreation Department, UB Liberty Partnership, University District CDC,
Urban Christian Ministries, Valley Community Association, Westminster Community Charter School, Westside Community Center, Willie Hutch Jones Sports & Education, WNY United Against Drug & Alcohol Abuse, Young Audiences, Community Action Organization (Detention), Firsthand Learning (Detention), Willie Hutch Jones Sports & Education (Detention).
Agencies
receiving Year - Round funding in 2014 include: Access of WNY, Inc. ($ 10,000), African Cultural Center of Buffalo, Inc. ($ 8,500), Be-A-Friend Program, Inc. (Big Brothers Big Sisters)($ 7,500), Blossom Garden Friends School ($ 3,000), Boys & Girls Club of Buffalo, Inc. ($ 7,500), Boys & Girls Club of Eden, Inc. ($ 5,000), Boys & Girls Club of Northtowns of WNY, Inc. ($ 12,500), Boys & Girls Club of Orchard Park, Inc. ($ 5,000), Boys and Girls Club East Aurora, Inc. ($ 15,000), Buffalo
Urban League, Inc. ($ 12,500), Canisius College ($ 5,000),
Child & Adolescent Treatment Services, Inc. ($ 5,500),
Child and Family Services of Erie County (Haven House)($ 10,000), Compeer West, Inc. ($ 10,000), Computers for
Children, Inc. ($ 7,500), Cradle Beach Camp, Inc. ($ 12,500), Daemen College ($ 10,000), Elim Community Corporation ($ 5,000), Erie Regional Housing Dev.
States Step Up Efforts to Reduce School Segregation In response to a state Supreme Court ruling that
children in Hartfords
urban schools were
receiving an inferior and unequal education, Connecticut stepped up efforts to improve the education of
urban schools.
Problems exist in large
urban districts and in low - income rural areas, elites often concede, but they have convinced themselves that at least their own
children are
receiving an excellent education in their affluent suburban districts.
To the extent that it persuades people to avoid reforms that change school incentives in favor of ever - increasing school spending, Jonathan Kozol's work is an impediment to the very thing that he claims to desire most: a day when
urban minority
children receive an acceptable education.
In response to a state Supreme Court ruling that
children in Hartford's
urban schools were
receiving an inferior and unequal education, Connecticut stepped up efforts to improve the education of
urban schools.
To them, whether
children received their vaccinations, proper dental care, and a warm, encouraging oasis amid the chaos of
urban life seemed just as important.
My mission is to influence the educational system by ensuring
children from
urban communities
receive an excellent education regardless of their financial status.
For years, the funding formula for schools has been based off of this dynamic so we shouldn't be shocked as to why inner city,
urban and rural school Districts struggle with making sure that
children in America outside the bubble of privilege
receive adequate educational resources.
Pruitt said while she does not offer that as an excuse for Gary schools or any
urban school, she said those facts underscore the urgency to alleviate the effects of poverty on
children, and help them
receive a full range of educational and family services that complement one another to help students reach their potential.
It is perhaps one of the most enduring legal «
urban myths»: that a man and woman who live together for many years, support each, maybe have
children together, are viewed in the eyes of the law as being married and so when their relationship ends, they will be entitled to
receive a fair share of their home and any other assets.
However, in some more positive news, SEARCH (the Study of Environment on Aboriginal Resilience and
Child Health), a unique partnership study into the health and wellbeing of
urban Aboriginal
children and their families in NSW, is set to continue its work as a platform to close the Indigenous health gap, after
receiving a five - year NHMRC grant for more than $ 2.8 million.