Friday, May 29, 2009

10 Ways to Engage With Prevent Child Abuse America through Social Media.

We understand the continued importance of social media when striving to present our message to a variety of constituents. In an effort to increase awareness, we are currently using a variety of social media outlets to compliment the ongoing evolution of our website. To help you navigate these various outlets we have a compiled a list of 10 Ways to Engage with Prevent Child Abuse America through social media.

1. Become a fan of our Facebook page.

2. Join our Facebook Cause.

3. Send a pinwheel Superpoke! on Facebook.

(1) Search for Superpoke! via the search tool in the upper right corner of your Facebook page; (2) Click on the "Causes" tab; (3) Click on our pinwheel-themed poke; (4) Choose who you want to send it to from your address book at the bottom of the page; (5) Hit send. As the sender, you will receive a confirmation page with further information on the organization, ways to poke others and links to our Pinwheels for Prevention website.

4. Sign-up for our newsletter. There is a spot at the top of our website that says "Interested in our newsletter."

5. Sign-up for our by visiting our website and clicking on Advocacy on the left side of our homepage.

6. Visit our blog, which you have, thanks, but please also consider setting-up (a) an RSS (Really Simple Syndication) feed of the blog through a blog reader like those at Google or Bloglines or (b) an e-mail feed such as those through Feed My Inbox so whenever the blog is updated you will receive the blog entry in an e-mail.

7. Follow us on Twitter.

8. Visit out YouTube channel.

9. Add a signature line to your e-mails about Prevent Child Abuse America or Pinwheels for Prevention.

For example: Learn more. Lend Your Voice. Volunteer. Donate. Join us in creating a national movement around healthy child development and the prevention of child abuse and neglect. Visit us at www.preventchildabuse.org.

10. Join the movement at Pinwheels for Prevention.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Prevent Child Abuse America's response to Newsweek's article "The Principal and The Paddle."

You may have seen Newsweek's recent article "The Principal and The Paddle," which discusses a principal's use of corporal punishment in his formerly struggling school. Below is the Letter to the Editor we sent to Newsweek in response to this article. We did not seek to get into a debate about the merits of corporal punishment, but we did look to discuss what a lost opportunity this article truly was, not only failing to discuss alternatives to corporal punishment, but the long-term impacts of this approach and how we all play a role in child development.


To the Editor,

I am profoundly disappointed in your recent article “The Principal and The Paddle.” It is a story with many missed opportunities that could have been used to engage the public in an important and emotionally charged issue. Prevent Child Abuse America’s policy position on corporal punishment is that age-appropriate discipline may be necessary in school and institutional settings but that non corporal means of discipline, such as giving time-outs, explaining rules, or taking away privileges, have been shown to be more effective than paddling. Whether the use of corporal punishment in schools is appropriate or not however, is not the focus of this letter. My focus today is highlighting how this article could have encouraged readers to ask a different series of questions to educate and inform the American public on this contentious issue.

The article could have been more balanced in asking what the long-term impact of corporal punishment is on a child’s development? Are those long term impacts worth the perceived short-term benefits as described in the article? Are children able to differentiate between this type of sanctioned behavior and the other types often found on the school playground or at the school bus stop; behaviors that themselves bring disciplinary action in many circumstances? Do children translate the use of this type of punishment as an acceptable means to control and manage others rather than providing more peaceful and more effective means of solving problems? The article told a local story that could have been an important forum for a national issue.

We all play a role in ensuring that prevention strategies exist in the communities in which we live. We also all play a role in children’s development and I hope your next article will focus on these things. We know that teaching children violent discipline teaches them violence. More importantly, we know that it is not effective. Certainly many of Principal Nixon’s other actions and reforms should be celebrated and we can all probably learn from them to enhance our collective efforts on child development. Child development is the core of community development and community development is what drives economic development. I look forward to the article that glamorizes these facts as well.

Regards,


James M. Hmurovich, President & CEO