Two New Focused Topics Courses in Development
With input from the U.S. Department of Defense’s Office of Military Family Readiness Policy’s Children, Youth, and Families (OMFRP’s CYF) division, the ³Ô¹ÏÍø (³Ô¹ÏÍø) team is developing two new Focused Topics courses.
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Child Abuse Identification & Reporting for ³Ô¹ÏÍø Staff
Approximately 650,000 children are victims of child abuse or neglect each year in the United States. All staff members in a child development center or youth program have a legal and ethical obligation to keep children safe from harm. This course helps support staff members recognize the signs of child abuse and neglect, understand procedures for making a report, identify program features and policies that keep children safe, and examine their own roles in preventing and reporting child maltreatment.
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Child Abuse Prevention for ³Ô¹ÏÍø Staff
The first responsibility of every staff member in an early childhood or school-age program is to keep children safe from harm. This includes protecting children from harm that may occur at home or in their child care program. This course will help support staff members understand their role in preventing child abuse and neglect. Staff members can gain a basic understanding of typical development and behaviors and develop the skills to recognize appropriate versus inappropriate expectations and guidance. ³Ô¹ÏÍø staff members will be equipped with information on how protective factors can support and strengthen children and families through positive, nurturing interactions.
New Focused Topics Course Available
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Sexual Development & Behavior in K-12 Students
In coordination with the U.S. Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA), a new Focused Topics course, Sexual Development & Behavior in K-12 Students, is now available through the ³Ô¹ÏÍø. This course provides foundational knowledge of typical sexual development and behavior for students in kindergarten through high school as well as problematic sexual behavior. This nine-lesson course will support K-12 teachers and youth program staff in responding to normative and problematic sexual behaviors that occur in programs. Read more about this release in its course release article.
Selected New Content Updates
The ³Ô¹ÏÍø includes the latest research and best practices. Our content team continually reviews new research and updates to national guidelines. Details on content updates over the last three months include:
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COVID-19 ³Ô¹ÏÍø
The latest information and guidance regarding COVID-19 can be found at the Center for Disease Control (CDC): . In addition to continual updates to this resource during this time of physical distancing, we also added a 30-minute webinar from the Society for Research in Child Development about the science of screen time during COVID-19. For more information and resources to support to caregivers during COVID-19, see COVID-19 Child Care ³Ô¹ÏÍø. Family-friendly resources are available in our related article; Family Resources during COVID-19. Reach out to us at inquiries@virtuallabschool.org if you have a resource you would like us to share.
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Anxiety in Children & Youth
Anxiety disorders are one of the most common mental health issues in children and youth. Information on childhood anxiety and developing coping strategies to support children and youth to overcome anxious thoughts have been added to the School-Age track, Social & Emotional Development course, Lesson 5, Promoting Social-Emotional Development: Positive Relationships. For more details, see our recent news post: /news/child-anxiety.
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Adult Learning Principles
The foundation of effective coaching is respecting and understanding the complexity of adult learners. Understanding the characteristics of adult learners helps us tailor our professional development opportunities, coaching, and leadership so that these tools are supportive and effective in changing teachers’ practices. For more information on principles of adult learning including connections to specific content, activities, and resources in the ³Ô¹ÏÍø, see the full article at: /news/supporting-adult-learners.
Highlights from the Field and Recent Research
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Impact of Technology on Children's Social Skills
Recent research published in the American Journal of Sociology suggests that there is little evidence that screen exposure negatively impacts children’s developing social skills. Social scientists from The Ohio State University and Brigham Young University used data from The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study to compare teacher and parent evaluations of children’s interpersonal skills. The social skills of children who started kindergarten in 1998 were compared with those who began kindergarten in 2010. Results indicated that children’s social skills did not decline between 1998 and 2010 despite the increase in screen exposure in the last decade. For more information visit .
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Benefits of Spending Time Alone
Research indicates that there are many physical and psychological benefits of spending time alone. Solitude allows you to focus your mind, think more clearly and deeply, effectively solve problems, concentrate, increase productivity, and enhance your relationships with others. Despite the benefits of solitude as a self-care strategy, it can be difficult to find time to be alone. Some suggestions to help you integrate alone time into your schedule include disconnecting from technology, getting up early, closing your office door, using your lunchtime, and marking time off in your calendar for scheduled alone time. Additional self-care strategies can be found in the ³Ô¹ÏÍø Focused Topics Courses Social Emotional Learning for Teachers & Trauma-Informed Care in Child Care Settings. Read the full article here: .
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Racial Disparities in COVID-19 Impacts
The ability to become infected with COVID-19 is universal, however the results of being infected can differ. For example, older adults and those with health conditions are most susceptible to the virus, and people of color experience higher rates of hospitalization and death. Researchers have begun exploring the racial and ethnic disparities in COVID-19's impact. Two possible explanations for these racial and ethnic disparities include (1) socioeconomic conditions (employment in essential service jobs without adequate protection; residing in smaller, more crowded quarters; jobs without the ability to work from home; less access to high quality health care) resulting in higher exposure to the virus (2) health conditions resulting from exposure to adversity early in life (racism, poverty, socioeconomic disadvantages, trauma) which lead to health problems that result in greater risk for hospitalization or death from COVID-19. See the full report here: .
Tech Updates
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Family Child Care Activities Upgraded!
In May, we updated all activities in the Family Child Care track to make them easier to complete electronically. This upgrade allows family child care providers to complete required and optional activities without having to download and print a physical copy of the file. Instead, these direct care users can fill out the activity online, then save a copy locally that can be emailed to their TCS or Program Manager as needed. School-Age activities will be the next and final Direct Care track to be upgraded. You can also access the Fillable Activities ³Ô¹ÏÍø Article for additional guidance.