In an effort to promote healthy social and emotional development and school
readiness among young children, Ohio and Colorado recently increased funding for early childhood mental health consultation...
Illinois» Fathers for New Futures (FNF) hosts the Power of Fathers Symposium, a statewide collaborative of nonprofits that seeks to strengthen and support low - income minority fathers in developing relationships with their
children, families, and communities.77
Among its programs, FNF provides job
readiness training, parent education, case management,
child support information, and additional services to
young fathers and men trying to reconnect with their families.78 FNF also hosts a working group of practitioners, and research and policy experts that supports outcomes for
children of noncustodial, African - American fathers.79
Most programs with the goal of healthy
child development and well - being, school readiness or preventing child abuse and neglect include promoting nurturing parenting among their goals, because «Young children experience their world as an environment of relationships, and these relationships affect virtually all aspects of their development — intellectual, social, emotional, physical, behavioral, and moral» (National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2
child development and well - being, school
readiness or preventing
child abuse and neglect include promoting nurturing parenting among their goals, because «Young children experience their world as an environment of relationships, and these relationships affect virtually all aspects of their development — intellectual, social, emotional, physical, behavioral, and moral» (National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2
child abuse and neglect include promoting nurturing parenting
among their goals, because «
Young children experience their world as an environment of relationships, and these relationships affect virtually all aspects of their development — intellectual, social, emotional, physical, behavioral, and moral» (National Scientific Council on the Developing
Child, 2
Child, 2004).