Parenting

May 11 2006 - 9:00am
May 11 2006 - 10:30am
Etc/GMT+5

Dads and Husbands: Promoting Child Well-Being Through Father Involvement and Marriage Programs is co-sponsored by Chapin Hall Center for Children and the Urban Institute, and will take place in Washington, DC:

May 3 2006 - 1:00pm
May 3 2006 - 3:00pm
Etc/GMT+5

Charting a Course: Challenges to Building and Sustaining Effective Home Visitation Programs: Lessons Learned from the States

May 14 2006 - 12:00am
May 14 2006 - 11:59pm
Etc/GMT+5

Mother's Day

Pete Wright, an attorney with decades of experience in special education law—and his own memories of standing up before the U.S. Supreme Court to argue a case—attended oral arguments last week in the most recent special education case to reach the highest court. Wright shared his impressions with Connect for Kids Editor Susan Phillips.

Last month Connect for Kids reported on Teenangels, young volunteers who help their peers understand the importance of Internet safety. What other efforts are underway to help protect children and youth from being exploited through social networking online? Cecilia Garcia reports.

While parents worry about potential dangers to their children lurking in our web-surfing, IM-ing, text-messaging culture, their efforts to help can be hampered by their own lack of knowledge. The Teenangels program—which trains young people to protect their peers online—is one way around that problem. Tamekia Reece takes a look.

Posted on March 14, 2006

Research shows that as many as 60 percent of students are "chronically disengaged" from school. This report from the Coalition for Community Schools offers evidence that community-based learning—which integrates different strategies, including service learning, place-based education, environmental and civic education, and work and community service—can help re-engage students using real-world content and issues. The community-based approach is linked with higher attendance rates, improved academic performance, and on-time graduation.

CFK reports from: Vulnerable Youth and the Transition to Adulthood
Event: A panel discussion
Organized by: Chapin Hall Center for Children and the Urban Institute
Where/When: Urban Institute, Washington DC, Thursday, February 9, 2006

In the second of a new series of panel discussions on positive youth development models, five panelists discussed the issues facing certain populations of young people as they make the transition to independent living as adults.

The national spotlight is shining on Detroit, as Superbowl XL roars into town. But after the glitz and glitter are gone, nearly half of the children in this beleaguered city will still be living in poverty, and Detroit will still be hard-pressed to provide basic services they need. Connect for Kids' Cecilia Garcia looks at how one nonprofit organization, Communities in Schools of Detroit, is trying to pick up the slack.

Mar 30 2006 - 9:00am
Apr 1 2006 - 5:00pm
Etc/GMT+5

The 15th Biennial Conference of the Society for Reseach in Human Development will be held in Forth Worth, Texas.

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