Nurturing FamiliesPlan of Work

Back to the Program

Bullitt County CES

Title:
Nurturing Families
MAP:
Building Healthy Families
Agents Involved:
Ruth Chowning
MAJOR PROGRAM 1:
Nurturing Parenting
MAJOR PROGRAM 2:
Relationship Smart Plus 3.0
MAJOR PROGRAM 3:
Real Skills for Everyday Life
MAJOR PROGRAM 4:
Nurturing Families (general)
Situation:
Healthy couple and parenting relationships and resulting family stability benefit the well-being of adults and children. Co-habiting, same-sex, divorced, widowed and single households are the new majority. 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 2009, 26 percent of Kentucky children lived in poverty, ranking Kentucky 48th in the nation. Children who start kindergarten with delayed development and fewer assets are by far more likely to repeat grades, get tracked into lower-tier classes and drop out of high school than more advantaged children. More than half of Kentucky’s 56 judicial circuits have some form of mandated divorce or parent education; more such education is needed. Within Bullitt county, there are no local Parenting Programs. This presents many of our limited resource citizens with significant challenges of traveling over 25 miles and paying for classes to meet court mandated requirements. 25% of the children who are removed from a home here in Bullitt County are done because of hazardous living conditions due to an unclean home. Working with the county social services and judicial branches, adults can be taught life skills that may not have been taught within their parental family unit. It takes a “village” (community) to adequately support families in rearing children. Everyone who takes a parenting role has at some point the intention of loving children and doing a good job of rearing them. Raising a family is a strenuous, long-lasting job at best. Extension has helpful resources to offer.
Long-Term Outcomes:
Kentucky families improve their quality of life resulting in stronger families
Build personal strengths and self-control, interpersonal communication, life skills including wise decision-making
Practice parental leadership skills
Foster the optimal development of children and youth
Access community resources when needed
Become volunteers to make their community a better place to live for everyone
Intermediate Outcomes:
• # who Set and used family rules, routines and limited screen time
• # who reduced stress levels, made time for selves, and/or made wise decisions about money, time, etc.
• # who played and spent quality time with child daily
• # who accessed community agencies and resources when needed
Initial Outcomes:
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, and habits, etc.
Intends to contact community agencies for assistance
Evaluation:

Long-term Outcome: Practice parental leadership skills

Indicator: Participants will report decreased involvement in court system

Method: report by participants and court system

Timeline: June 2018


Intermediate Outcome: # who played/ spent quality time with child

Indicator: Participants will report strong parent/child relationships

Method: 6 month post assessment tool/ phone survey

Timeline: December 2017, June 2018


Initial Outcome: Commits to set family rules regarding eating together, limiting screen time, active play and exercise, set routines

Indicator: Participants will develop and implement a family “Rules/Disciplinary” system

Method: Pre/ Post class assessment tools

Timeline: June 2018


Long-term Outcome: Build personal strengths and self-control, interpersonal communication, life skills including wise decision-making

Indicator: Participants will graduate from SAP program

Method: # of SAPP participants reporting gain of personal skills

Timeline: December 2017, May 2018


Intermediate Outcome: # who contacted and interacted with child weekly

Indicator: Participants will report strong parent/child relationships

Method: 6 month post assessment tool

Timeline: December 2016, June 2017


Initial Outcome: Commits to set family rules regarding eating together, limiting screen time, active play and exercise, set routines

Indicator: Participants will develop ideas/ “mock” plan for a family “Rules/Disciplinary” system

Method: Post class assessment tools/ forms

Timeline: October 2016, June 2017


Learning Opportunities:

Audience: Court mandated parents

Project or Activity: 13 week parenting program

Content or Curriculum: “Nurturing Parenting” program

Inputs: FCS Agent, FCS Program Assistant, FCS Council members, Bullitt County Women’s Club, District Court Judges, Social Service case workers, School social workers, Headstart workers, CASA workers, Bullitt Co Homemakers, Department of Family Sciences faculty

Date: August 2017- December 2018


Audience: SAP incarcerated participants

Project or Activity: 24 week parenting program

Content or Curriculum: “Nurturing Fathering/Parenting” program

Inputs: FCS Agent, FCS Program Assistant, FCS Council members, District Court Judge, SAP Case workers, School social worker, CASA workers, Bullitt Co State representative, Bullitt Co Homemakers, Department of Family Sciences faculty

Date: July – Dec 2017, Feb- May 2018



Success Stories

Moving past incarceration as a Father

Author: Ruth Chowning

Major Program: Nurturing Parenting

In the past 3 years, the Bullitt County Family and Consumer Science Extension Agent has partnered with the Bullitt County Detention Center Substance Abuse program (SAP) to provide a 13 week “Nurturing Fathering” program to over 331 incarcerated male participants. Surveys of the men who participate in the program show that over 40 % of the men had absentee fathers or suffered from childhood trauma. During the classes they often discuss the negative impact their background has on their

Full Story
Back to the Program