[NIFL-FAMILY:3183] Excerpts from Connect For Kids Weekly -- October 9, 2000

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Subject: [NIFL-FAMILY:3183] Excerpts from Connect For Kids Weekly -- October 9, 2000
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Connect for Kids Weekly--October 09, 2000
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**Rising Star in Denver
by Cecilia Garcia
By transforming a neighborhood blight into a nurturing pre-school for
Latino children, a group of parents and teachers in Denver, Colorado have
shown that community effort can improve the lives of children and brighten
a whole neighborhood. Connect for Kids' director Cecilia Garcia explains
how the Family Star Community Center was born.
http://www.connectforkids.org

**Resources for Adults Concerned About Young Children
>From brain development and early learning to discipline and the effects of
the media on very young children, the Connect for Kids Early Years feature
is your resource on issues affecting children under age three.
http://www.connectforkids.org

**What Grown-Ups Understand About Child Development
Zero to Three surveyed 3,000 adults-many of them parents-on their
knowledge about child development and specific policies affecting children
and families. Though most respondents had a grasp on the basics, there is
some room to grow. Many do not understand that even very young infants
have long-term memory, are affected by witnessing violence, and can become
depressed. Read the summary or full study on zerotothree.org. (You will
need Adobe Acrobat Reader.)
http://www.connectforkids.org

**Pediatricians Take a Position on Mental Health Coverage
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) released new guidelines (October,
2000) on child and adolescent mental health and substance abuse services,
calling for more comprehensive public and private insurance aimed at
increasing access to treatment to address the needs of increasing numbers
of children with psychosocial problems.
http://www.aap.org/advocacy/releases/octmental.htm

Watch for the Surgeon General's national Action Plan for Children's Mental
Health to be released soon. http://www.gwu.edu/~mtg/ejournal/october_2.htm

**Improving School Environments for Students
The U.S. Dept. of Education announced grants to 58 school districts to
establish or expand elementary school counseling programs staffed by
school counselors, psychologists and social workers.
http://www.ed.gov/PressReleases/09-2000/0915.html

___________________________

RESOURCES FOR COMMUNITY BUILDING

**Early Head Start Funding
The Administration for Children, Youth and Families is accepting
applications from local public and private nonprofit and for-profit
organizations interested in carrying out services under the Early Head
Start program. Grants are available in 83 communities in 35 states and the
District of Columbia. Deadline: November 13, 2000. For an application,
call 800-351-2293.

___________________________

HEALTH -- WHAT WE DON'T TALK ABOUT CAN HURT KIDS

**Sex Education in America
Parents say they want more in-depth sex education in schools, including
practical issues like resisting pressures to have sex or how to use
condoms as well as more attention to controversial topics like sexual
orientation and abortion, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
http://www.kff.org/content/2000/3048/

**HIV Epidemic Hitting Women, Minorities, Adolescents Harder
Over the last fifteen years the AIDS epidemic in the United States has
shifted considerably, with the number of new AIDS cases among women,
minorities and adolescents increasing. A new report from the Institute of
Medicine calls for greater emphasis on prevention measures, including
routine services for at-risk and infected individuals in all clinical
settings.
http://www.nationalacademies.org/webextra/hiv/

**Drug Dependence, a Chronic Mental Illness
The social consequences of drug dependence have cast it as a "social
problem," but it has all the earmarks of a chronic illness. Treating it as
a chronic mental illness can lead the way to better prevention and
treatment, according to this Journal of the American Medical Association
article, which argues that "drug dependence should be insured, treated and
evaluated like other chronic illnesses."
http://jama.ama-assn.org/issues/v284n13/abs/jsc00024.html

**Primary Caregivers and Psychological Problems of Children
What are the factors that influence a physician's willingness and ability
to talk to parents about their children's emotional and psychological
problems? According to research in the journal Pediatrics, the key factor
in pediatricians providing counseling or referrals was the relationship
between physician and parents. Unfortunately, visits don't often last long
enough to create bonds.
http://www.pediatrics.org/cgi/content/full/106/4/e44#Conclusion

**A Look at Poor Dads Who Don't Pay Child Support
The 2.6 million fathers who do not live with their children, are poor and
owe child support may face barriers to employment and financial security
similar to poor custodial mothers. This Urban Institute report asks what
can be done to improve programs to help these fathers meet their
obligations to their children.
http://newfederalism.urban.org/html/discussion00-07.html#intro

**Emerging Neighborhoods for Affordable Housing
Even in some of the hottest real estate markets in the country, working
families can still find modestly priced homes in "just right"
neighborhoods, like the "Seven Trees" neighborhood in San Jose, according
to the Fannie Mae Foundation. Innovative public policies are essential to
maintain such islands of affordability before they are submerged by rising
housing costs, if working families are to be able to secure a toehold in
the housing market.
http://www.fanniemaefoundation.org/news/release/justright092600.htm

**City House or Country House Makes a Difference
Families leaving welfare and trying to find gainful employment in rural
areas face different, and sometimes more persistent, barriers than urban
families, according to a series of reports from the Joint Center of
Poverty Research.
http://www.jcpr.org/newsletters/vol4_no5/index.html

___________________________

REPORTS IN BRIEF

**Pediatrics Beyond the Office
The October 2000 issue of Pediatrics has a number of articles on
children's exposure to harmful elements in their environment, including
television commercial violence, tobacco smoke from non-parental smokers in
inner city households and lead exposure despite dust control.
http://www.pediatrics.org

**Early Drinking Increases Lifetime Injury Risk
Adults who began drinking before age 14 are more likely to drink heavily
and are at greater risk for unintentional injury during adulthood than
those who began drinking at or after age 21.
http://silk.nih.gov/silk/niaaa1/releases/injury.htm

**Making Up Your Mind to Learn
The Manpower Demonstration Research Corporation offers "So I Made Up My
Mind," an overview of adult learning in library literacy programs.
http://www.mdrc.org/Reports2000/MDRCLibLit.pdf

Minnesota.
The Minneapolis Star Tribune reports on a pilot program to help kids visit
their moms -- in prison.
http://www.connectforkids.org/homepage1667/index.htm?state_id=400

Mississippi.
Mississippi is using federal School-to-Work dollars to support a Web site
to help children ages four and up learn about higher education and career
opportunities.
http://www.connectforkids.org/homepage1667/index.htm?state_id=401

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ABOUT CONNECT FOR KIDS

The Connect for Kids Weekly is an electronic newsletter of Connect for Kids
(http://www.connectforkids.org/), a resource for adults who want to build
better communities for kids and families. The Benton Foundation, our
publisher, works to realize the social benefits made possible by the public
interest use of communications.



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