The Invisible Other: considerations to fostering relational health with deployed military families
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The Invisible Other: considerations to fostering relational health with deployed military families
The Invisible Other: considerations to fostering relational health with deployed military families
All children and their families have the right to feel welcomed and appreciated for who they are as they participate in early childhood programs.
Developmentally Appropriate Practice (DAP) of the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) is a primary resource guiding directors and teachers in creating programs that make that right a reality.
At CalAIMH, we are appalled at Alabama’s banning of DAP and the removal of Dr. Barbara Cooper, a national leader at NAEYC, as head of the state’s early care and education programs.
It is reprehensible to put at risk the social and emotional health and growth of young children – particularly the marginalized children at whom this is most directed – in order to score political points in some kind of culture war. We strongly object.
One thing you can do is to sign on to the letter from leaders in the field, including many former presidents of NAEYC. Click on this link and let your voice be heard.
The California Association for Infant Mental Health offers deepest condolences to the families of the 18 souls who lost their lives to senseless gun violence in Monterey Park and Half Moon Bay and to the many more injured and impacted by these unthinkable acts of violence.
We stand with the grieving Asian Pacific Islander communities in California and across the nation. We must #StopGunViolence and #StopAAPIHate.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Monterey_Park_shooting