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Provider tools

Tools and resources for working with families.

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Providers working with Military and First Responder Families

The ADAPT intervention was developed to support parenting and resilience among military families coping with the stress of deployment and reintegration.

To get started as an organization: adaptparenting.org/get-started-as-organization

Providers and courts working with divorced and separated parents

NBP is the Nation's Leading Online Research- Based Program for Divorced & Separated Parents. eNew Beginnings Program teaches tools within the four building blocks of effective parenting after divorce or separation.

  1. Positive activities to have more fun with your children
  2. Listening tools to get your children to share more
  3. Effective tools to decrease your children’s misbehaviors
  4. Practical tools to protect your children from conflict with your ex-partner

To get started as a provider: divorceandparenting.com/for-professionals/ 

Contact NBP

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Providers working with families coping with the death of a parent or caregiver

The Resilient Parenting for Bereaved Families Program is designed to promote effective parenting and teach useful coping skills following the death of a parent or caregiver.

Click here to learn more about training : https://asu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_cO8Tz2bMSEi3edf

 

Contact Resilient Parenting

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Schools and community agencies working with middle school students

BRIDGES is a family-focused program for middle school students and their parents. It uses evidence-based strategies to increase school engagement and keep teens on a positive path in life to prevent common teen obstacles. Long-term follow-up shows that BRIDGES increases high school graduation rates and reduces drug and alcohol issues in high school.

For more information visit reachinstitute.asu.edu/bridges

Contact BRIDGES

Trauma Screener Tool 

Many who work with children need to determine whether a child has experienced traumatic stress. In response to this need, Ambit Network has developed a quick, simple, and reliable instrument to screen children for traumatic stress symptoms.

Who can use it?
Anyone who works with children ages 5-18 who may have experienced a traumatic event, including:

Clinicians
Caseworkers
Educators

How does it work?
The Traumatic Stress Screen for Children and Adolescents (TSSCA) tool features five simple questions to measure children’s traumatic stress. The result will suggest one of three categories: normal, borderline, or requiring further trauma assessment. The tool is based on the UCLA PTSD Index for DSM V.

Download the tool

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