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FosterParentCollege.com® Releases Pre-Service Class Cultural Issues in Parenting

August 19, 2013

Eugene, OR — Everyone has a unique culture which influences their behavior, beliefs, and view of the world. Children in care benefit when foster parents respect and are supportive of their culture.

This class provides examples of cultural differences and stereotypes. It examines how parents can support children's cultural development at various ages. Viewers also learn how to prepare themselves and the children in their care to cope with insensitive or hurtful episodes at school and in the community.

The instructor, Tanya Coakley, PhD, is a specialist and professor in the studies of foster care and cultural competency and also leads the FosterParentCollege.com in-service class "Culturally Competent Parenting."

The class is part of a series developed as online versions of the Ohio Institute for Human Services standardized pre-service training curriculum in use throughout the United States. The project is funded through a Phase II SBIR grant (#2 R44 HD054032-02) awarded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development.

FosterParentCollege.com provides interactive online training for foster, adoptive, and kinship parents. There are 44 self-paced courses available at this time. Titles include Substance-Exposed Infants, Child Abuse and Neglect, Caring for Children Who Have Been Sexually Abused, Culturally Competent Parenting, and The Foster Home Investigation Process.

FosterParentCollege.com is:

  • Rated by the California Evidence-based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare
  • Endorsed by the NFPA, the Foster Family-based Treatment Association and the Canadian Foster Family Association
  • Approved by CASA and the National Adoption Center.

Please click here to visit fosterparentcollege.com. For more information about this article, contact us at press@northwestmedia.com.