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Designing Parenting Programs for Homeless Families: What Works?

Designing Parenting Programs for Homeless Families: What Works?. Presented by: Mary C. Herrington, LCSW Coordinator, Richmond Regional Homeless Education Program Richmond Public Schools 2020 Westwood Ave. Richmond, VA 23230 804.780.6288

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Designing Parenting Programs for Homeless Families: What Works?

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  1. Designing Parenting Programs for Homeless Families: What Works? Presented by: Mary C. Herrington, LCSW Coordinator, Richmond Regional Homeless Education Program Richmond Public Schools 2020 Westwood Ave. Richmond, VA 23230 804.780.6288 mherring@richmond.k12.va.us

  2. Barriers to Healthy Parenting

  3. Adult Survivors of Childhood Abuse • need for security • need for support • need for encouragement to be separate, unique individuals • need to feel protected • need to experience consistent feelings of love, belonging and feelings of their own worth

  4. Societal and Cultural Beliefs in the Value of Physical Punishment • use of corporal punishment has been condoned in our society • denial

  5. effects of physical/emotional withdrawal fears of relapse lack of family support feelings of isolation guilt narcissism/lack of empathy Recovery from Substance Abuse

  6. Fear of Intimacy and Responsibility of a Committed Relationship • dealing with loss • inability to form a close bond with their children

  7. Chronic Mental Illness • need for psychiatric interventions • psychiatric evaluation and medication assessment

  8. Group Model

  9. A Psychoeducational Approach to Parenting Premise: Education in appropriate parenting and child rearing practices coupled with insight into past experiences with parental role models are important treatment and intervention strategies in which to offset the generational perpetuation of dysfunctional parenting practices.

  10. The Psychoeducational Model • hybrid of education and personal insight • therapeutic learning in a psychoeducational structure

  11. Group Experiences • cognitive level (knowledge based) • affective level (emotional)

  12. developmental expectations self-esteem communication skills behavior management anger management personal values Cognitive Level Constructs:

  13. Affective Level • childhood and adult history becomes the focal point GOAL: Integration of the ideas about child development, parenting, and the relationship between past parenting experiences

  14. Teaching Empathy • shift from ego-centered to becoming more child centered • using group process to connect child’s feelings through their own experiences using group process

  15. Challenges: group cohesiveness trust resistance cognitive functioning lack of child care Open Group

  16. Group Facilitator as “Model” • Corrective Emotional Experience

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