The document discusses family values from the perspective of Group B. It defines family values as responsibility, care, concern, respect, honesty and love. It outlines the roles and responsibilities of family members, particularly parents. It notes how family values and roles have changed over time from the past to present. While there are advantages to modern changes like both parents working, there are also disadvantages like less quality time with children. The document suggests without family values there could be negative consequences like less child safety and more family conflicts. It provides the story of Jong Batu as a lesson on the importance of family values.
Unresolved conflicts in family relationshipsirvingspencer
The document discusses unresolved conflicts in family relationships. It lists common causes of family conflicts such as emotional or physical cheating, substance abuse, lack of communication, parenting disagreements, and financial stress. Exposure to abuse or neglect can negatively impact children's development. Resolving conflicts requires communication between all involved family members, including children, parents, siblings, and other relatives. Practicing communication skills can help reconcile unresolved issues and promote healthy family relationships.
Unresolved conflicts in family relationshipsirvingspencer
Unresolved conflicts in family relationships can occur when ideas, actions, or beliefs are confronted but not resolved. Common causes of family conflict include separation or divorce, emotional or physical cheating, substance abuse, lack of communication, parenting disagreements, and financial stress. Exposure to environments of abuse or neglect can negatively impact children's development. Resolving unresolved conflicts requires open communication between all involved family members.
Unresolved conflicts in family relationshipsirvingspencer
Unresolved conflicts in family relationships can occur when ideas, actions, or beliefs are confronted but left unresolved. Common causes of family conflict include separation or divorce, emotional or physical cheating, substance abuse, lack of communication, parenting disagreements, and financial stress. Exposure to unresolved conflicts or abusive environments can negatively impact a child's development. Resolving conflicts through open communication promotes healthy relationships within the family.
The document discusses single parenthood, which occurs when a child is cared for by one dominant parent. Common causes include a boyfriend leaving after a pregnancy, divorce where one parent doesn't want the children, and pre-marital pregnancy. Challenges for single parents include making ends meet, power struggles, visitation, and joint custody issues. Some assistance programs that help single parents include monetary support, child care subsidies, low income home energy assistance, WIC, and TANF. The document suggests helping single parents through donations to give them more time with their children or encouraging them to remarry.
Unresolved conflicts in family relationshipsirvingspencer
The document discusses unresolved conflicts in family relationships. Common causes of family conflicts include separation, divorce, cheating, substance abuse, lack of communication, changes in finances, parenting disagreements, and a child becoming an adult. Exposure to abuse or neglect can negatively impact a child's development. Resolving conflicts requires communication between all involved family members. Practicing communication skills can help reconcile differences and promote healthy relationships.
This document discusses building partnerships between schools and parents using Joyce Epstein's six types of parent involvement. It provides tips and strategies for each type of involvement including parenting, communication, volunteering, learning at home, decision-making, and collaborating with the community. Specific suggestions are given such as providing child development information to parents, communicating about student progress, involving parents in planning events, and partnering with community organizations. The goal is to engage parents in their child's education through multiple avenues of involvement.
The document discusses the concept of tough love parenting. It outlines what tough love parenting involves, specifically setting firm boundaries and consequences for troubled teens. It also explores whether tough love really works, with some research finding it can help develop respect, confidence and unselfishness in children. While some see it as cruelty, most surveys found it is not cruelty but teaching good values. The document also examines the psychology of different parenting styles and their effects on children, with authoritative parenting found to be most effective. It considers whether tough love is necessary today and generally concludes it can generate good character traits in children when applied reasonably without being too harsh.
The document discusses family values from the perspective of Group B. It defines family values as responsibility, care, concern, respect, honesty and love. It outlines the roles and responsibilities of family members, particularly parents. It notes how family values and roles have changed over time from the past to present. While there are advantages to modern changes like both parents working, there are also disadvantages like less quality time with children. The document suggests without family values there could be negative consequences like less child safety and more family conflicts. It provides the story of Jong Batu as a lesson on the importance of family values.
Unresolved conflicts in family relationshipsirvingspencer
The document discusses unresolved conflicts in family relationships. It lists common causes of family conflicts such as emotional or physical cheating, substance abuse, lack of communication, parenting disagreements, and financial stress. Exposure to abuse or neglect can negatively impact children's development. Resolving conflicts requires communication between all involved family members, including children, parents, siblings, and other relatives. Practicing communication skills can help reconcile unresolved issues and promote healthy family relationships.
Unresolved conflicts in family relationshipsirvingspencer
Unresolved conflicts in family relationships can occur when ideas, actions, or beliefs are confronted but not resolved. Common causes of family conflict include separation or divorce, emotional or physical cheating, substance abuse, lack of communication, parenting disagreements, and financial stress. Exposure to environments of abuse or neglect can negatively impact children's development. Resolving unresolved conflicts requires open communication between all involved family members.
Unresolved conflicts in family relationshipsirvingspencer
Unresolved conflicts in family relationships can occur when ideas, actions, or beliefs are confronted but left unresolved. Common causes of family conflict include separation or divorce, emotional or physical cheating, substance abuse, lack of communication, parenting disagreements, and financial stress. Exposure to unresolved conflicts or abusive environments can negatively impact a child's development. Resolving conflicts through open communication promotes healthy relationships within the family.
The document discusses single parenthood, which occurs when a child is cared for by one dominant parent. Common causes include a boyfriend leaving after a pregnancy, divorce where one parent doesn't want the children, and pre-marital pregnancy. Challenges for single parents include making ends meet, power struggles, visitation, and joint custody issues. Some assistance programs that help single parents include monetary support, child care subsidies, low income home energy assistance, WIC, and TANF. The document suggests helping single parents through donations to give them more time with their children or encouraging them to remarry.
Unresolved conflicts in family relationshipsirvingspencer
The document discusses unresolved conflicts in family relationships. Common causes of family conflicts include separation, divorce, cheating, substance abuse, lack of communication, changes in finances, parenting disagreements, and a child becoming an adult. Exposure to abuse or neglect can negatively impact a child's development. Resolving conflicts requires communication between all involved family members. Practicing communication skills can help reconcile differences and promote healthy relationships.
This document discusses building partnerships between schools and parents using Joyce Epstein's six types of parent involvement. It provides tips and strategies for each type of involvement including parenting, communication, volunteering, learning at home, decision-making, and collaborating with the community. Specific suggestions are given such as providing child development information to parents, communicating about student progress, involving parents in planning events, and partnering with community organizations. The goal is to engage parents in their child's education through multiple avenues of involvement.
The document discusses the concept of tough love parenting. It outlines what tough love parenting involves, specifically setting firm boundaries and consequences for troubled teens. It also explores whether tough love really works, with some research finding it can help develop respect, confidence and unselfishness in children. While some see it as cruelty, most surveys found it is not cruelty but teaching good values. The document also examines the psychology of different parenting styles and their effects on children, with authoritative parenting found to be most effective. It considers whether tough love is necessary today and generally concludes it can generate good character traits in children when applied reasonably without being too harsh.
The Positive Involvement of Fathers: what do families need from practitoners?BASPCAN
This document discusses the benefits of positive father involvement for mothers, children, and communities. It summarizes research finding that maternal support from the baby's father correlates with lower depression rates, and paternal support correlates with shorter hospital stays for new mothers. Involving noncustodial fathers can reduce the likelihood children are placed in out of home care.
The document also reports on a study of 74 practitioners working with 872 families, finding 45% had positively involved fathers. Common reasons for noninvolvement included failure to engage or support fathers. Interviews with 20 fathers identified key qualities of effective practitioners, including being motivated, dependable, resilient, and going above and beyond for fathers. The document calls on managers to better support
This document discusses how families can support other families with children in the hospital through volunteering together. It provides statistics showing that families who volunteer together benefit from stronger relationships and learning important values like compassion. Volunteering as a family unit at places like Ronald McDonald House can help families with sick children feel loved and supported through services, meals, and activities. The document proposes recreating Maggie's Ministry at a church to match families willing to help with families experiencing medical hardships.
This is a Persuasive Speech for SP111 at Mt. Hood Community College about Single-Parent Families needing Respect, because Single-Parent families can be very successful, not all the negativity it is portrayed to be.
Single parent families have increased substantially in recent years and are usually mother-only, with the mother raising children alone due to divorce, death of a partner, or other reasons. Single parenting is extremely challenging as single parents must handle all parenting tasks and responsibilities alone, and a lack of support from friends or family can cause such stress that a single parent loses custody of their children.
James R Ganley School in Mexico -Life bridge to hopewmprotary
This document discusses Touch the World Ministries' efforts to empower a community in Juarez, Mexico by investing in children and families through programs at the James R. Ganley School such as short term mission teams, a skate park, and global outreach. It outlines the challenges of changing mindsets, building long-term relationships, and developing a sustainable ministry. The ministry aims to meet community needs, foster moral and biblical values, and facilitate spiritual transformation through parenting classes, health classes, and vocational training. It notes funding cuts due to economic issues in the US and drug cartel dangers that have reduced support, leaving the school operating at less than half its needed funds. It provides an example of a sponsored child,
Divorce rates in South Africa have remained relatively steady between 25,000 and 25,500 between 2016 and 2018, with the most common reasons being lack of commitment, infidelity, lack of intimacy, abuse, and falling out of love. Divorce can have negative repercussions such as emotional and financial difficulties, loss of friendship, stress, depression, and confusion for both parents and children, with children in particular feeling confused about where they belong and trapped between choosing parents.
The document discusses parents' roles in child custody in different situations. It explains that children deserve unconditional love and support from their parents or guardians, especially during their formative years. It discusses child custody considerations when parents are together, separated, one parent is deceased, incapacitated, or when a child is placed in foster care. The document stresses that a child's well-being should be the top priority in custody decisions and arrangements.
Dr. Deena Stacer teaches an online program about high conflict coparenting. She has a PhD in psychology and experience mediating over 850 divorces. Her program teaches parents strategies for disengaging from conflict with the other parent to protect their children from emotional damage. One approach she recommends is "parallel parenting", also called "Mom's World, Dad's World", where parents minimize communication and make independent rules in their own time with the children. This style can help reduce conflict when parents cannot agree on parenting issues.
Parental Alienation at the Intersection of Family Law, Social Science and Liv...Dialogue in Growth
Presentation on Parental Alienation assessment and intervention given to the Australian Family Law Pathways Network (FLPN) in May 2018. This presentation was attended by family law practitioners, independent children's lawyers (ICL) and family consultants (custody evaluators).
The scope of the presentation covered definitions of parental alienation, how parental alienation is situated in family law and family violence, evaluation, assessment and evidence-based intervention to remediate parent-child relationships.
A Hopeful Presentation on Reconnection and Reunification after Parental Alien...Dialogue in Growth
This presentation was given at a parental alienation symposium at the International Congress of Psychology 2016 in Yokohama, Japan. featuring an International expert panel. This presentation features disruptive strategies and tactics that may facilitate reunification in certain cases and where all other options have been exhausted.
Responding to parental alienation for practitioners. This presentation contains the latest information on evidence based interventions for parental alienation
This document discusses building partnerships between families and schools. It outlines Joyce Epstein's six types of parent involvement: parenting, communication, volunteering, learning at home, decision-making, and collaborating with the community. For each type of involvement, examples are provided of strategies schools can use to facilitate partnership and engagement with families. The goal is to empower schools to strengthen school-family-community relationships through open communication and involvement across different areas of children's education and development.
Sole parent families face significant challenges in meeting their needs for financial support, access to services, security and safety, employment, housing, and other resources. The ability of sole parents to access resources is influenced by their gender, socioeconomic status, location, and other demographic factors. Women heading sole parent families in particular struggle due to lower incomes and challenges balancing work and parenting responsibilities alone. Location also greatly impacts access to resources, with rural sole parents facing greater difficulties.
From Parental Alienation to Reunification-Toward Parent-Child ReunificationDialogue in Growth
This document outlines a presentation on parental alienation and reunification. It discusses parental alienation as a 21st century issue, provides definitions of an alienated child and alienating parent, and outlines a 10-step program for parent-child reunification. It also addresses how parental alienation is assessed, how alienated children and target parents are affected, and debates whether parental alienation syndrome should be a diagnosis.
This document provides information from a presentation on supporting children through family separation. It discusses how children may experience grief, loss, and behavioral changes after separation. It emphasizes protecting children from parental conflict, maintaining security and routines for children, and facilitating the child's relationship with both parents. The presentation covers tips for helping children manage emotions, supporting yourself during the process, and being a facilitative gatekeeper regarding the child's time with each parent.
This document provides an overview of literature on parental alienation, including assessment and intervention approaches. It discusses how parental alienation negatively impacts children's development and that adolescents are more likely to become alienated. Various assessment models are outlined that focus on the alienating parent's behavior. Intervention approaches discussed include court-ordered therapy, environmental modifications, neutral placements of children, and programs like Family Bridges workshops that aim to educate and promote reconciliation in a supportive setting. Challenges to interventions and the need for further research are also noted.
The document discusses engaging fathers in pregnancy centers and fatherhood initiatives. It provides an overview of a workshop on using mothers as a gateway to involve fathers more. It discusses the importance of fathers and the negative impacts of father absence, such as increased poverty, poor educational and health outcomes for children. It also notes that many fathers lack parenting skills and knowledge but want to be more involved in their children's lives.
The FACT Group focuses on increasing positive involvement between fathers and their children. The group provides support services and aims to help fathers better meet their parental responsibilities. It covers important aspects of fatherhood so men of all backgrounds can benefit. Research shows that active father involvement promotes children's well-being and skills. It reduces risks like dropout rates and substance abuse. The group encourages fathers to get involved through activities, education on child development, and other services.
The Positive Involvement of Fathers: what do families need from practitoners?BASPCAN
This document discusses the benefits of positive father involvement for mothers, children, and communities. It summarizes research finding that maternal support from the baby's father correlates with lower depression rates, and paternal support correlates with shorter hospital stays for new mothers. Involving noncustodial fathers can reduce the likelihood children are placed in out of home care.
The document also reports on a study of 74 practitioners working with 872 families, finding 45% had positively involved fathers. Common reasons for noninvolvement included failure to engage or support fathers. Interviews with 20 fathers identified key qualities of effective practitioners, including being motivated, dependable, resilient, and going above and beyond for fathers. The document calls on managers to better support
This document discusses how families can support other families with children in the hospital through volunteering together. It provides statistics showing that families who volunteer together benefit from stronger relationships and learning important values like compassion. Volunteering as a family unit at places like Ronald McDonald House can help families with sick children feel loved and supported through services, meals, and activities. The document proposes recreating Maggie's Ministry at a church to match families willing to help with families experiencing medical hardships.
This is a Persuasive Speech for SP111 at Mt. Hood Community College about Single-Parent Families needing Respect, because Single-Parent families can be very successful, not all the negativity it is portrayed to be.
Single parent families have increased substantially in recent years and are usually mother-only, with the mother raising children alone due to divorce, death of a partner, or other reasons. Single parenting is extremely challenging as single parents must handle all parenting tasks and responsibilities alone, and a lack of support from friends or family can cause such stress that a single parent loses custody of their children.
James R Ganley School in Mexico -Life bridge to hopewmprotary
This document discusses Touch the World Ministries' efforts to empower a community in Juarez, Mexico by investing in children and families through programs at the James R. Ganley School such as short term mission teams, a skate park, and global outreach. It outlines the challenges of changing mindsets, building long-term relationships, and developing a sustainable ministry. The ministry aims to meet community needs, foster moral and biblical values, and facilitate spiritual transformation through parenting classes, health classes, and vocational training. It notes funding cuts due to economic issues in the US and drug cartel dangers that have reduced support, leaving the school operating at less than half its needed funds. It provides an example of a sponsored child,
Divorce rates in South Africa have remained relatively steady between 25,000 and 25,500 between 2016 and 2018, with the most common reasons being lack of commitment, infidelity, lack of intimacy, abuse, and falling out of love. Divorce can have negative repercussions such as emotional and financial difficulties, loss of friendship, stress, depression, and confusion for both parents and children, with children in particular feeling confused about where they belong and trapped between choosing parents.
The document discusses parents' roles in child custody in different situations. It explains that children deserve unconditional love and support from their parents or guardians, especially during their formative years. It discusses child custody considerations when parents are together, separated, one parent is deceased, incapacitated, or when a child is placed in foster care. The document stresses that a child's well-being should be the top priority in custody decisions and arrangements.
Dr. Deena Stacer teaches an online program about high conflict coparenting. She has a PhD in psychology and experience mediating over 850 divorces. Her program teaches parents strategies for disengaging from conflict with the other parent to protect their children from emotional damage. One approach she recommends is "parallel parenting", also called "Mom's World, Dad's World", where parents minimize communication and make independent rules in their own time with the children. This style can help reduce conflict when parents cannot agree on parenting issues.
Parental Alienation at the Intersection of Family Law, Social Science and Liv...Dialogue in Growth
Presentation on Parental Alienation assessment and intervention given to the Australian Family Law Pathways Network (FLPN) in May 2018. This presentation was attended by family law practitioners, independent children's lawyers (ICL) and family consultants (custody evaluators).
The scope of the presentation covered definitions of parental alienation, how parental alienation is situated in family law and family violence, evaluation, assessment and evidence-based intervention to remediate parent-child relationships.
A Hopeful Presentation on Reconnection and Reunification after Parental Alien...Dialogue in Growth
This presentation was given at a parental alienation symposium at the International Congress of Psychology 2016 in Yokohama, Japan. featuring an International expert panel. This presentation features disruptive strategies and tactics that may facilitate reunification in certain cases and where all other options have been exhausted.
Responding to parental alienation for practitioners. This presentation contains the latest information on evidence based interventions for parental alienation
This document discusses building partnerships between families and schools. It outlines Joyce Epstein's six types of parent involvement: parenting, communication, volunteering, learning at home, decision-making, and collaborating with the community. For each type of involvement, examples are provided of strategies schools can use to facilitate partnership and engagement with families. The goal is to empower schools to strengthen school-family-community relationships through open communication and involvement across different areas of children's education and development.
Sole parent families face significant challenges in meeting their needs for financial support, access to services, security and safety, employment, housing, and other resources. The ability of sole parents to access resources is influenced by their gender, socioeconomic status, location, and other demographic factors. Women heading sole parent families in particular struggle due to lower incomes and challenges balancing work and parenting responsibilities alone. Location also greatly impacts access to resources, with rural sole parents facing greater difficulties.
From Parental Alienation to Reunification-Toward Parent-Child ReunificationDialogue in Growth
This document outlines a presentation on parental alienation and reunification. It discusses parental alienation as a 21st century issue, provides definitions of an alienated child and alienating parent, and outlines a 10-step program for parent-child reunification. It also addresses how parental alienation is assessed, how alienated children and target parents are affected, and debates whether parental alienation syndrome should be a diagnosis.
This document provides information from a presentation on supporting children through family separation. It discusses how children may experience grief, loss, and behavioral changes after separation. It emphasizes protecting children from parental conflict, maintaining security and routines for children, and facilitating the child's relationship with both parents. The presentation covers tips for helping children manage emotions, supporting yourself during the process, and being a facilitative gatekeeper regarding the child's time with each parent.
This document provides an overview of literature on parental alienation, including assessment and intervention approaches. It discusses how parental alienation negatively impacts children's development and that adolescents are more likely to become alienated. Various assessment models are outlined that focus on the alienating parent's behavior. Intervention approaches discussed include court-ordered therapy, environmental modifications, neutral placements of children, and programs like Family Bridges workshops that aim to educate and promote reconciliation in a supportive setting. Challenges to interventions and the need for further research are also noted.
The document discusses engaging fathers in pregnancy centers and fatherhood initiatives. It provides an overview of a workshop on using mothers as a gateway to involve fathers more. It discusses the importance of fathers and the negative impacts of father absence, such as increased poverty, poor educational and health outcomes for children. It also notes that many fathers lack parenting skills and knowledge but want to be more involved in their children's lives.
The FACT Group focuses on increasing positive involvement between fathers and their children. The group provides support services and aims to help fathers better meet their parental responsibilities. It covers important aspects of fatherhood so men of all backgrounds can benefit. Research shows that active father involvement promotes children's well-being and skills. It reduces risks like dropout rates and substance abuse. The group encourages fathers to get involved through activities, education on child development, and other services.
Inner Peace Parenting Magazine
September & October 2014, Issue 22
"The Loss of a Child, Everyone Suffers Differently"
by Dr. Asa Don Brown
pages 3, 17, 21
The document discusses the benefits of adoption for both children and parents. It notes that while nearly 250,000 children were adopted between 1999-2014, over 463,000 remain in foster care. Growing up in institutions is psychologically damaging for children, as they feel uncertain and lack the stable parental love and encouragement found in family homes. Adoption allows infertile couples and same-sex couples to build families, while providing children with safety, protection and opportunities. The document advocates for adoption, arguing it greatly benefits both parents and children by giving children homes rather than forcing them to remain in institutions.
John Bowlby, Mary Ainsworth, and Melanie Klein were early contributors to attachment theory. Attachment theory proposes that there are four main attachment styles in children - secure, anxious-ambivalent, avoidant, and disorganized - which depend on the quality of care and interaction with primary caregivers, especially mothers. High-quality caregiving where caregivers are consistently responsive helps children develop secure attachment and the ability to depend on others.
The document discusses the perception that being taken into care is damaging to children versus evidence that care can improve outcomes for neglected children. It summarizes that:
1) There is a long-held belief that care is catastrophic for children's futures, but extensive research shows that care, when used effectively, can improve lives and that some children left in neglectful homes experience worse problems.
2) Studies find that most children entering care have serious pre-care problems but their welfare improves over time in care, and outcomes are better than for neglected children returned home against the evidence.
3) An overoptimistic view that deeply inadequate parents can change leads to children being left too long in neglectful homes, despite research
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
The simplified electron and muon model, Oscillating Spacetime: The Foundation...RitikBhardwaj56
Discover the Simplified Electron and Muon Model: A New Wave-Based Approach to Understanding Particles delves into a groundbreaking theory that presents electrons and muons as rotating soliton waves within oscillating spacetime. Geared towards students, researchers, and science buffs, this book breaks down complex ideas into simple explanations. It covers topics such as electron waves, temporal dynamics, and the implications of this model on particle physics. With clear illustrations and easy-to-follow explanations, readers will gain a new outlook on the universe's fundamental nature.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
1.
Turning
Parents
into
Partners:
Family
Ministry
101
KIDMIN
2012:
Children’s
Ministry
Conference
Anthony
Prince
A
of
Families
Be
Casting
a
for
Partnership
The
Parent
is
the
not
the
t:
@anthony_prince
|
f:
facebook.com/anthonyprince
|
e:
aprince@glenkirkchurch.org
|
b:
westcoastcm.com
2.
Families
Are
Not
Everyone
Determining
of
Baby
into
Partnership
Suggested
resources:
www.orangeparents.org
Parenting
Beyond
Your
Capacity,
Reggie
Joiner
&
Carey
Nieuwhof
Think
Orange,
Reggie
Joiner
Spiritual
Parenting,
Michelle
Anthony
Formational
Children’s
Ministry,
Ivy
Beckwith
t:
@anthony_prince
|
f:
facebook.com/anthonyprince
|
e:
aprince@glenkirkchurch.org
|
b:
westcoastcm.com