In this five-minute video, produced by KidCareCanada, Dr. Nils Bergman explains the theory and value of skin-to-skin contact for newborns and parents.
Read More“Back to the Future”: A recent study looks at the value of recreating natural Indigenous language learning environments through language nest early childhood immersion programs.
Read MoreIn March 2016, the Office of the Correctional Investigator recommended increasing participation in mother-child units in federal prisons, particularly minimum-to-medium security prisons, enabling children up to the age of 4 years old to stay with their mothers, and allowing mothers access to health and social programs.
Read MoreThe first payments of the new Canada Child Benefit went out on July 20, 2016, in a program designed with hopes to both reduce the number of children in Canada under the poverty line and provide a stimulus to the Canadian economy.
Read MoreThe Healthy Eating & Food Security action guide is available for download. The action guide is designed to assist local governments to support healthy eating and food security in communities, sharing practices and examples of how local governments can create conditions that support healthy communities.
Read MoreAn article on “Why We Should Teach Empathy to Preschools” from the mindful website looks at the Golestan school in Berkeley founded by an Iranian educator whose commitment to empathy training was inspired by her own experience of bullying at school as a new immigrant when she was 9 years old. Click here to learn more and to access a simple tool offering four regular practices for reinforcement of empathy in children.
Read MoreThe summer 2016 edition of Every Mind Matters, the regular newsletter of the Psychology Foundation of Canada, includes an article, focusing on research on the value of free play as a preventative to the elevated levels of stress and anxiety which are being increasingly recorded in children.
Read MoreA four-day Circle of Security Parenting DVD Training will run in Prince George from 3-6 October, offering training for professionals to deliver this program to parents and caregivers.
Read MoreHELP. Everyone needs help at some time or another, a collection of voices of young parents in Greater Vancouver, was released in April 2016 as part of the Young Parents Study being run by UBC and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR/IRSC).
Read MoreDad Central’s My Dad Matters was developed to address the changed circumstances of programming for fathers in today’s Canadian society.
Read MoreTwo articles in the Spring 2016 edition of The Early Childhood Educator focus on support for refugee families as agencies respond to the ongoing intake of refugees from Syria and the Middle East. There is a review of the findings of the recent CMAS review of global research on caring for refugee children and an article from the local perspective of supporting incoming refugees, from CVIMS in Nanaimo.
Read MoreA pair of new international studies, funded by the Government of Canada through Grand Challenges Canada and published this July, further strengthen scientific understanding of the links between what a child experiences in the first years of life and later childhood behaviour and abilities.
Read MoreThe Canadian Mental Health Association (CPMA) BC Division are now delivering the Confident Parents: Thriving Kids program, a family-focused coaching service effective in reducing mild to moderate behavioural problems and promoting healthy child development in children ages 3-12.
Read MoreRegistration is now open for the following PHAC CAPC, CPNP and AHS Regional Training Events: Kootenays, Okanagan and Northern Regions.
Read MoreCreston Family Place CAPC program have shared a story of how flexible programming can help parents deal with challenging circumstances and encourage parents who have benefited from the program to share the parenting skills they have developed with those just starting out along the parenting road.
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