Nurturing Families General
Nurturing Families
Kathy Byrnes, Joan Bowling, Linda Brown-Price
Nurturing Families (general)
Nurturing Parenting
Grandparents and Grandchildren Together
Relationship Smart Plus 3.0
Healthy couple and parenting relationships and resulting family stability benefit the well-being of adults and children. The number of children being raised by people other than their biological parents is on the rise in Kenton County. Children who live absent from their biological fathers are two to three times more likely to be poor, to experience educational, health, emotional and behavioral problems than their peers who live with their married, biological (or adoptive) parents. In 2013, 25 percent of Kentucky children lived in poverty, ranking Kentucky 40th in the nation. Children who live in poverty are more likely to have learning disabilities and developmental delays. With many of Kentucky's family courts mandating parenting education to families in crisis more such programs are needed. People are living longer. Kentucky's current population of seniors (65+) is 13.3%, a number that is expected to double in the next 40 years due to the aging Baby Boomers (post WWII babies born between 1946-1964). Approximately 25% of Kentucky's population includes Boomers, who, in 2011, started turning 65. Meanwhile, babies born in Kentucky in 2011 are projected to live to be 75 years old (3 years younger than national average). Whether it is the graying of America or extended life expectancies, aging is a lifespan process. Therefore, it is important to acknowledge and celebrate the changes that accompany aging and help individuals, families and communities manage the challenges and discover the positive aspects of life transitions and growing older.
Kentucky families are able to:
• Care for the physical and mental health and well-being of each individual over
the long term
• Foster the optimal development of children and youth
• Practice parental leadership skills
• Build personal strengths and self-control, interpersonal communication, life
skills including wise decision-making
• Embrace people from diverse cultural and ethnic backgrounds
• Reach out with empathy to people dealing with severe stress
• Access community resources when needed
The number of people who:
• Set and used family rules, routines and limited screen time
• Reduced stress levels, made time for selves, and/or made wise decisions about
money, time, etc.
• Identified realistic expectations for child's tasks
• Create a legacy
• Increase communication and enhance relationships and social support
• Work as a family unit to acknowledge and embrace aging issues
• Reported using preventive and positive discipline techniques in response to
misbehavior, and setting and enforcing logical consequences
• Practice skills to strengthen and sustain relationships
• Accessed community agencies and resources when needed
• Commits to set family rules regarding eating together, limiting screen time,
active play and exercise, set routines
• Intends to manage stress; make time for self; listen, talk, bond with family
members; read with child daily; teach responsibility in use of money, time,
etc.
• Describes child's developmental levels relative to averages
• Healthy lifespan behaviors
• Verbalizes realistic behavior expectations
• Lists developmentally appropriate playthings
• Discusses discipline vs. punishment, and preventive and positive discipline
techniques
Outcome: Improved personal strengths and self-control, interpersonal communication, life skills including wise decision-making
Indicator: Increased positive parent/caregiver and child interactions
Method: Surveys, evaluations, telephone calls, testimonials, informal feedback
Timeline: 4 weeks following end of school/support group yearly meetings and/or classes
Outcome: Adjust and maintain environmental factors to promote independent aging
Indicator: Improved quality of life from change in home environment and increase in physical activity and caregiver knowledge
Method: Observation, informal feedback, surveys, evaluations
Timeline: Two months after the class
Long-term Outcome:
Indicator:
Method:
Timeline:
Audience: Head Start students, Covington Housing Authority residents, general public
Project or Activity: LEAP
Content or Curriculum: LEAP materials, UK publications
Inputs: UK Specialist
Date: Monthly series August 2017 through May 2018
Audience: Parents and teens
Project or Activity: Relationship smarts series
Content or Curriculum: Relationship Smarts Curriculum Extension publications; UK fact sheets
Inputs: UK Specialists
Date: April 2018
Audience: Relatives/Grandparents Raising Children
Project or Activity: Relatives/Grandparents Raising Children Support Group
Content or Curriculum: UK publications
Inputs: UK publications, Children's law office, Area Development District, FRYC's
Date: Monthly meetings August 2017 through June 2018
Audience: General Public
Activity: Living Well Newsletter
Content: Parenting Financial and Nutrition
Inputs: UK publications
Date: July-June 2019
Audience: Parents
Activity: Parenting Newsletter
Content: Parenting, Financial, and Nutrition
Inputs: UK Specialists, other land grant universities - Extension
Date: October 2018/December 2018/February 2019/April 2019
Audience: Grandparents Raising Children, Parents and Caregivers
Content: Nurturing Families Curriculum
Activity: ABC’s of Parenting Series
Inputs: UK Specialists, local family court officials, Family Nurturing Center
Date: Fall 2017
Audience: Young Adults and Parents
Activity: Launching Your Child into Adulthood
Content: Extension Sponsored
Inputs: UK Agents
Date: April 2018
Audience: Extension Homemakers
Project or Activity: Area Seminar, "Healthy Horticulture" - for family activities and mental health
Content or Curriculum: UK Factsheets
Inputs: Kenton, Boone, Campbell Horticulture and FCS agents
Date: January 12, 2019
Author: Joan Bowling
Major Program: Grandparents and Grandchildren Together
The Kenton County the Cooperative Extension Service Relatives Raising Relatives support group continues to serve families faced with raising children who have been placed in their care due to circumstances preventing the parents from caring for them. The support group has been the only one of its kind within the county that is not affiliated with a religious organization or specific social group. The monthly meeting serves as a place for caregivers to network with others in similar s