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Founded in 1974, the Center for the Improvement of Child Caring
(CICC) has grown to be one of the nation's largest and most
productive nonprofit parenting and parenting education
organizations. For more information about the Center's many
programs, activities, and products and services, go to our website,
http://www.ciccparenting.org,
or call (800) 325-2422.
| Partners Sign Up for National Campaign to Find and Help
Young Children with Special Needs |
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CICC's recently launched National Partnership Campaign to
Find and Help Young Children with Special Needs has
immediately attracted individuals and organizations to
participate.
The Campaign addresses a deplorable and unacceptable
situation - the fact that as many as 75% of the three million
children under five with special learning, emotional, social,
intellectual and physical problems are NOT being identified
and treated by professionals before entering school. As a
result, these vulnerable children usually do poorly in school,
suffer insults and hardships, including being more likely to
be abused by their parents. In turn, they often become
anti-social and require remedial and legal services costing
taxpayers billions of dollars.
The Campaign is designed to help turn this situation around
at the grassroots level. It mobilizes individual and
organization partners to educate, motivate, sponsor and
encourage parents of young children to be alert to special
needs. If special needs are detected, immediate action must be
taken. Partners orient parents to regularly use the online CICC
Discovery Tool and Referral System for these purposes.
Presentations about the Campaign by CICC's Founder and
Executive Director, Dr. Kerby T. Alvy, have recently been
conducted at meetings at the Children's Defense Fund and the
National Education Association in Washington, D.C., at the
annual conference of the Florida Coalition for Children in
Orlando, and at the annual conference of the National
Association for the Education of Young Children in Anaheim,
California.
The responses have been very positive. Several individuals
and organizations immediately signed up to become Encourager
Partners in the Campaign, and obtained the Encourager
Partner Kit to guide their grassroots activities (see
picture of Dr. Alvy with Michael and Sheryl Neelan of ChildCareWorld.com,
new Encourager Partners). Many other organizations who learned
about the Campaign at these meetings and conferences are in
the process of sharing the Campaign with their Boards and
staff with the possibility of signing as Encourager or Co-
Sponsoring Partners.
Campaign updates will be featured in subsequent Effective
Parenting newsletters. To arrange for Dr. Alvy to speak to
your group or organization, write to ciccparenting@sbcglobal.net or call CICC's
toll-free at 1(800) 325-2422.
Learn
About Partnerships
Use
the CICC Discovery Tool
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| Effective Parenting is Prevention Workshop, January 22,
2005 |
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Alliant
International University (AIU), which was founded in 2001
through the combination of United States International
University, the California School of Professional Psychology
and Alliant University, and which has six California locations
and several locations abroad, is presenting in partnership
with CICC, a full-day workshop entitled Effective Parenting
is Prevention.
The workshop is based on the fact that a variety of social
and health problems, like child abuse and childhood emotional,
behavioral and learning problems, can be prevented or reduced
by parents rearing children in skillful, sensitive and
non-violent ways.
The workshop builds on what is scientifically known about
effective parenting and delves into controversial practices
such as corporal punishment. Then it presents several model
parenting skill-building programs that are being used
nationwide to teach parents non-violent and effective
practices, including CICC's trio of programs, Confident
Parenting, Effective
Black Parenting and Los
Niqos Bien Educados.
The workshop will also focus on how to engage parents in
identifying special needs early in life and how to connect
them to appropriate interventions. The National Partnership
Campaign to Find and Help Young Children with Special Needs
and the use of The CICC Discovery Tool and
Referral System will be covered.
The workshop will be led by Dr.
Kerby T. Alvy, and much of what is addressed will be from
his various books and guides, including Parent
Training Today: A Social Necessity, Black
Parenting: Strategies for Training, The
Power of Positive Parenting, and The
CICC Discovery Tool.
The workshop will be held Saturday, January 22, 2005, 9:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m., on the campus of the California School of
Professional Psychology, 1000 S. Fremont Avenue, Alhambra, CA
91803. Fee: $145. CE Credit: 7 hours
To register for this workshop, or for further information,
please contact the AIU Continuing Education Office at (800)
457-1273, or visit www.alliant.edu/ce
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| CICC Receives Grant from Verizon to Support School
Readiness Parenting Seminars |
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The Verizon
Foundation has awarded CICC a $25,000 grant to
continue to conduct School Success from the Start seminars for
parents of pre-kindergarten children in Los Angeles County.
The School Success seminars provide parents with a wide
range of practical activities that they can do at home to help
their children develop the attitudes and skills to be
successful in kindergarten - and beyond! A great deal of what
is taught in these popular parenting training events is based
on the highly regarded Kindergarten
Survival Handbook by Dr. Allana Elovson.
Verizon Foundation support is part of its exemplary Verizon
Reads Initiative which is dedicated to the fight for a more
literate America and which funds community-based programming
to promote reading and literacy. This exemplary corporate
effort includes the Verizon Literacy Campus, an online
training center that provides assistance to a wide range of
groups and individuals working in the literacy field.
To work with CICC in bringing School Success from the Start
Seminars to your community, call CICC's Executive Director,
Dr. Alvy at (800) 325-2422 or email him at kalvy@aol.com.
Click here
for a report on the effectiveness of these seminars.
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| Help Support CICC |
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Please help further CICC's mission of Strengthening the
American Family through parent education and training. A
wide range of funding sources is used to keep the Center
operating and expanding.
The most important funds that CICC receives are from the
thousands of individuals who have made tax- deductible
contributions. These important funds are used by CICC to
provide free parenting services for needy families, to support
the organization's advocacy efforts, and to support the Center
during emergencies.
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Shaking, Hitting, Spanking: What To Do
Instead |
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Parental alternatives to outbursts of physical aggression
directed toward children is the theme of this powerful and
award-winning video-based parenting program. Taking a broad,
multi-cultural approach, this program deals with situations
which can lead to abusive responses that stress parents out
such as :
- Babies crying late at night
- Toddlers making kitchen messes
- Grade school children disobeying
- Teens refusing to clean their rooms
Each situation is presented in realistic and powerful
scenes right up to the moment when a parent is about to shake,
hit or spank a child. The tape is then stopped and discussion
of posssible alternatives occurs. The tape is then resumed and
several excellent alternatives are shown, all demonstrating
non-violent ways of dealing with each challenge, as well as
guidance on how to prevent future similar problems.
The Shaking, Hitting, Spanking: What To Do Instead program
can be used by individual families, loaned to families, or
presented as a stand-alone, one-session parenting class.
Another format would be to show and discuss one of the four
segments at regular parent meetings.
Click here
for price and order information on Shaking, Hitting,
Spanking: What To Do Instead.
A Spanish version is also available: Golpes
Y Gritos...Csmo Evitarlos.
Other videos that address and provide perspectives and
alternatives to corporal punishment:
Red,
White and Bruises: Why Parents Spank Their Children
I'm
Only Doing This For Your Own Good - Parents of Babies,
Toddlers and Preschoolers
It
Hurts Me More Than It Hurts You - Parents of School-Age
Children
My
Way or the Highway - Parents of Teenagers
Spare
the Rod, Spoil the Child - Interpretation of "Rod" as
Guidance, Not Violence
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