By
Linda Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- At-risk mothers, children and families will benefit
from a joint effort by two Mississippi agencies to deliver
educational materials to improve the well-being of
individuals, families and communities. Representatives
from Mississippi State University's Extension Service and
the Mississippi State Department of Health signed an
agreement in July for training and distribution of parent
education materials. According to the agreement, the
Extension Service will conduct training sessions and provide
publications for health department workers to give their
clients. Louise
Davis, child and family development specialist for MSU's
Extension Service, said this is an ideal arrangement for
both agencies. "Extension
has developed parenting education materials that the health
department has used for many years, but this is the first
effort to coordinate a joint approach," Davis said. "It is
difficult to reach at-risk families through meeting-type
settings, even small group meetings. Since health department
workers are going into homes, their visits are opportune
times to reach parents effectively in a one-on-one
setting." Extension
recently conducted two training sessions for health
department workers in the northern and southern halves of
the state. These workshops helped orient more than 100
service providers with the materials and curriculum they
will be using to educate parents. Extension will conduct
three quarterly sessions over the next year to provide
additional training. Davis
said the first training focused on educating parents of
children up to age 5. The curriculum and materials also are
part of Extension's efforts to "train the trainers" through
the Master Family Life Educator Volunteer
program. "Professionals
are limited in their ability to reach into communities. If
professionals can train community leaders to provide
educational materials, we will expand our reach into areas
with special needs," Davis said. "This partnership with the
health department will increase our number of trainers who
are training appropriate people in communities." The
health department's introduction to the Extension curriculum
resulted from Master Family Life Educator Volunteer training
by Bettye Wadsworth. Wadsworth is an Extension child and
family development area agent based in Jackson
County. "The
partnership between Extension and MSDH started when two
community-minded social workers decided to take part in the
Master Family Life Educator Volunteer training near the
Coast," Wadsworth said. "Their enthusiasm for the material
and for helping parents is the key to this program's future
success." Linda
Lather, a perinatal high-risk management social worker with
the MSDH in Pearl River County, heard about the Master
Family Life Educator training from a co-worker and believed
it would increase her effectiveness in working with
parents. "We
already had health education material on parenting, but the
Extension material is more focused on broader issues and not
just on problems," Lather said. "The new material has
structured curricula that will help us educate parents on
how to be more involved with their children and to
understand the purpose behind activities." As an
example of the positive manner in which the curriculum
addresses problems, Lather pointed to the issue of
discipline. "This
material will give parents the skills to use discipline to
correct behavior, not to punish," she said. Lather
and Lunita Wallace, her co-worker in Hancock County who also
took the training, saw the potential for using this
curriculum statewide. They wanted to enable other case
workers to have the same material and be united in their
efforts. They took their appreciation for the information
and materials to their district supervisor, Virginia
Adolph. "I was
familiar with Extension programs, so it did not take much to
convince me about the kind of opportunity a joint effort
would be for our agency. The health department and Extension
work with similar populations; this seems like a win-win
situation," Adolph said. "Before this agreement, our workers
would take part in quarterly staff meetings where experts
would provide appropriate information to improve our
professional skills." The new
arrangement will provide more formalized support through an
organized curriculum. Adolph said 75 percent of the
program's contacts are in one-on-one educational -- and
confidential -- settings. The material is also suitable for
group presentations. "One-on-one
encounters improve the communication between the educator
and the parent," Adolph said. Released:
Aug. 19, 2004
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
![]()
Parent
Education...
Mississippi
agencies join forces for families
Contact: Dr. Louise Davis, (662) 325-3083 or Bettye
Wadsworth, (228) 769-3047
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:08
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fcenews/fce04/040819.html
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