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North Carolina PACEs Connection

News from Columbus County, NC

 
Volume 18, Issue 1
Spring 2022
CCPC Introduces New Programs!
Ready & Resilient Children
funded by NC Community Foundation
Through the Ready & Resilient Program families will participate in activities, trainings, and workshops that promote early education and awareness of resilience. Families will learn the importance of early education as well as the types of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs), and they will learn how to work together to identify, address and ultimately reduce ACEs through resilience throughout this program.
Family Engagement Information Session Scheduled
We seek to:
  • Prepare families & children for Kindergarten
  • Provide supplies & resources to ensure school readiness & resilience
  • Present family engagement sessions in your local communities
  • Develop, Help, Teach & Learn
Requirements:
  • Must be a parent or caregiver to a child or children ages birth to 5
  • Must be a resident of Columbus County
  • Ready to learn & have fun!
What you need to know:
  • Family Engagement Information Session: April 11, 2022
  • Time: 6 P.M.
  • Where: 109 W. Main St in Whiteville or Virtual via Zoom
For information or to attend the Family Engagement Session,
call 910-642-8226, ext. 110 or ext. 111.
Columbus County Family Engagement and Leadership (FEL)
‘Children First Columbus’
Family Leaders and FEL coordinator after FELC meeting.
Pictured, left to right, are Lisa Clewis (Family Leadership & Engagement Coordinator), and family leaders Jennifer Stringfield, Alyssa Lewis, Andrea Jacobs Rofail, and Di’Shena Peterson. These are members of the newly formed Children First Columbus Family Engagement & Leadership Coalition.   
A Family Engagement and Leadership Coalition, Children First Columbus, has been formed to focus on uniting family leaders with agencies that offer services to families with young children. The coalition is composed of family leaders and community stakeholders who are working together to bring the family leader’s stories to light so that relationships, services, and policies can be improved and/or created to meet the needs of families with children ages birth to 5-years old.
Family partnerships create improved system-, program-, family-, and child-level outcomes across early childhood sectors. Early childhood sectors include local and state government agencies and legislators; non-profit and private community agencies, faith-based and advocacy agencies, researchers, technical assistance providers, and higher education institutions.
“The strength of our community lies in the stories of its citizens,” stated Dr. Selena Rowell, executive Director of CCPC. “This creates an opportunity for community service, civic and other agencies throughout the county to work with local families to strengthen policies and practices that affect young children and ultimately entire families,” she concluded.
To fully implement the North Carolina Early Childhood Family Engagement and Leadership Framework into Columbus County, the coalition invites family leaders and stakeholders from all sectors of the county to volunteer to become members of the coalition and help develop plans, and provide community support and resources in the community.
For more information about the Family Engagement and Leadership project, call Lisa Clewis, at 910-212-4689 or email lisa.clewis@columbussmartstart.org or contact Sherry Baldwin at 910-642-8226 Ext. 109, or email sherry.baldwin@columbussmartstart.org.
Good Oral Health Starts Early
By JUGTA KAHAI, MD, FAAP
Advanced Pediatrics, Whiteville, NC
Tooth decay (dental caries or cavities) is one of the most common chronic childhood diseases in the United States. The good news is there are ways to prevent it.
Even the tiniest teeth can decay. There are habits you can start now to keep your baby’s teeth healthy.
Who can get tooth decay?
Everyone, even babies, can get tooth decay. Some things put children at more risk, such as living in poverty, being in an ethnic or racial minority group, or having special health care needs. There are other reasons a child could be high risk.
• The child’s mother or main caregiver had tooth decay in the past 12 months or does not have a regular source of dental care.
• There are white spots on the child’s teeth. These spots are a sign that the tooth is losing calcium and minerals that keep it strong.
• There are tan, brown or black spots or you see holes (pits) on the teeth. This is a sign that the tooth is decaying.
How water helps
Fortunately, your family’s tap water probably has fluoride added to it. Fluoride is a safe and useful cavity-fighting ingredient that has been added to drinking water since 1945.
Fluoride is a natural mineral that can slow down or stop cavities from forming. When you drink water every day, the fluoride makes it hard for bacteria in your mouth to make acid. Fluoride also rebuilds tooth enamel (the outer layer of the tooth) and it even makes teeth stronger.
Check with your local water utility agency to find out if your water has fluoride. The health benefits work when the drinking water has 0.7 mg/L of fluoride. If your community water supply does not have fluoride or you live on a private well, ask your doctor if you should get a prescription for fluoride drops or chewable tablets for your child.
Fluoride toothpaste
As soon as your baby’s first tooth erupts, it’s time to start using fluoride toothpaste. Here’s how to do it:
• Use a tiny smear --- the size of a grain of rice --- until age 3. Clean the teeth at least twice a day. It’s best to clean them right after breakfast and before bedtime.
• Use a pea-sized amount of fluoride toothpaste when your child is 3 years old. Teach your child to spit without rinsing.
• It is best if you put the toothpaste on the toothbrush until your child is about age 6.
• As your child gets older let her use her own toothbrush. Until children are 7 or 8 years old, you will need to help them brush twice a day for at least 2 minutes. Try brushing their teeth first and then letting them finish.
A toothbrush should be the last thing to touch your child’s teeth
every night....
Do not put your baby to bed with a bottle at night or at naptime. It is also not a good idea to let your baby use a bottle filled with a sweet drink or dip your baby’s pacifier in anything sweet like sugar or honey. If you do put your baby to bed with a bottle, fill it only with water. You can give your baby about 4-8 ounces of water per day starting at around 6months.
Remember
Oral health starts early. Be ready to discuss your family’s plan for a “dental home.” All children need access to a dentist for regular care.
A CCPC staff member's baby celebrating Dr. Seuss Day.
We’re Still Here
Supporting Communities in Strengthening NC Families
By: Kris Demers,
Prevent Child Abuse NC Communications Manager
All children need safe, stable, nurturing environments and relationships to thrive. Science tells us that positive experiences and caring connections are vital in creating healthy brains that form a sturdy foundation for children’s future development. We all have a chance, every day, to nurture the supportive relationships everyone needs to build resilience – at any age.
But the COVID-19 pandemic put many families under great stress, like economic insecurity and social isolation. The caring connections that parents and children would confide in, learn from, vent to, laugh with, lean on, and love who lived outside the household were reduced to virtual connections, or even became nonexistent for a while in the early days of the pandemic.
Just like a car can only bear so much weight before it stops moving forward, challenging life circumstances can overburden families, making it hard for them to provide the best kinds of care and support. To prevent a breakdown in care, we can all do our part to keep the weight of heavy stressors from weighing families down.
Both parental stress and social isolation are risk factors for abuse and neglect. But what if we focused on getting ahead of the issue?What if we, as adults, all saw ourselves as key players in changing outcomes for the future, today? Imagine the possibilities for future generations if we took it upon ourselves to increase the factors that foster the safe, stable, nurturing environments North Carolina’s children need.
The protective factorsare conditions in families and communities that, when present, increase the health and well-being of children and families. Research has shown that the protective factors are linked to a lower incidence of child abuse and neglect. The five protective factors are:
  1. Parental Resilience
  2. Social Connections
  3. Knowledge of Parenting and Child Development
  4. Social and Emotional Competence in Children
  5. Concrete Supports in Times of Need
During the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Prevent Child Abuse North Carolina (PCANC) was still here, equipping communities with the knowledge, support, and resources to make child maltreatment prevention a priority in North Carolina. In partnership with North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, PCANC created the COVID-19 Parent & Caregiver Guide and an accompanying Social Media Toolkit, both in English and Spanish, to help families navigate the challenges inflicted on them during the pandemic. The guide also includes tips for community members to help unload some of those weights from the families.
       
But without someone like you, the guide is just a document at the ready to help the next family and community. It takes you, the caring adult, to see yourself as the invaluable piece of the puzzle that can build community and strengthen families. It takes you, the neighbor, teacher, friend, and family-member, to choose to get ahead of the issue, before it ever occurs, unleashing all children’s untapped potential.
Smart Start Receives IP Foundation Grant
International Paper Riegelwood Mill awarded Columbus County Partnership for Children $2,000 to purchase books and materials for ‘Let’s Read Columbus,’ a county-wide literacy awareness project. Pictured, left to right are Partnership executive director, Dr. Selena Rowell; Beverly Turner, director of Federal Programs and Human Resources for Whiteville City Schools and Kimberly Clewis, Communications Manager with International Paper, Riegelwood Mill.
The International Paper Foundation is one of the ways International Paper strives to reach its vision to be among the most successful, sustainable and responsible companies in the world. Started in 1952, the foundation annually provides millions in grants to 501 (c)(3) nonprofit organizations to address critical needs in the communities where its employees live and work. Funding priority is given to programs related to its signature causes: education, hunger, health & wellness, disaster relief, and initiatives that improve the planet. For more information, visit ipgiving.com.
Columbus County Partnership for Children (Smart Start) is part of a statewide network of nonprofit agencies working to advance a high-quality system of early care and education for families with children ages birth to five in North Carolina. The network seeks to ensure that all children receive the supports that they need in order to be prepared for kindergarten and ultimately, academic success.
April is Child Abuse Prevention & Awareness Month!
April is Child Abuse Prevention Month
...a time for communities to come together to build caring connections, supportive environments, and positive life experiences for all children April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month.
This month and throughout the year, the Columbus County Partnership for Children (Smart Start) encourages all individuals and organizations to play a role in making Columbus County a better place for children and families.
By ensuring that parents have the knowledge, skills, and resources they need to care for their children, we can help prevent child abuse and neglect by creating strong and thriving children, youth, and families in our communities. Research shows that protective factors are present in healthy families. Promoting these factors is among the most effective ways to reduce the risk of child abuse and neglect.
The factors are:
• Nurturing and attachment
• Knowledge of parenting and of child and youth development
• Parental resilience
• Social connections
• Concrete supports for parents
• Social and emotional competence of children
April is a time to celebrate the important role that communities play in protecting children and strengthening families. In support of these efforts, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Children’s Bureau, Office on Child Abuse and Neglect, its Child Welfare Information Gateway, the FRIENDS National Center for Community-Based Child Abuse Prevention and over 30 national prevention partners have created 2021/2022 Prevention Resource Guide: Strong and Thriving Families. The resource guide, designed for service providers who work throughout the community to support families, is available online at https://www.childwelfare.gov/pubPDFs/guide_2021.pdf.
Friday, April 1st is Wear Blue Day! This is a way that you can be a connection to strengthen families and help them thrive. Show your blue by posting pictures on your Facebook page and tagging Columbus County Partnership for Children (Smart Start) and hashtag: #WearBlueDay & #BeAConnection on your social media.
Pinwheels gardensrepresent the efforts to focus on community activities that support families along with public policies that prioritize prevention from the beginning of life to make sure child abuse and neglect never occur. Pinwheels are great reminders of how important it is to support children and their families!
All Week of the Young Child activities and videos will be posted virtually on Columbus County Partnership for Children’s website at https://www.columbussmartstart.com and Columbus County Partnership for Children (Smart Start) Facebook page.
Schedule of Events
Movement Monday, April 4
Join us virtually as Pamela Young Jacobs, Tribal Chairwoman of the Waccamaw Siouan Tribe demonstrates traditional dancing and teaches us about their indigenous culture!
Tasty Tuesday, April 5
Let’s talk about healthy nutrition and eating healthy! Meleah Collier, Family and Consumer Sciences Agent with the NC Cooperative Extension Services of Columbus County, will teach us how to make healthy eating choices. She will also demonstrate how to make a colorful, delicious and healthy snack that can easily be made right in your own home!
Work Together Wednesday, April 6
Tune in virtually as we work together with Brian Wuertz of The North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences at Whiteville to offer you an educational experience to learn more about butterflies!
Artsy Thursday, April 7
Get ready to be creative! Join Sally Mann of the Columbus County Arts Council as she demonstrates a fun art project! Allowing your child to be creative and imaginative helps them grow intellectually, socially, emotionally and even physically.
Reading is A Family Thing!
Family Friday, April 8
It’s family time! Join Ryleigh Madison, American Idol contestant and her uncle, Dustin Chapman, past American Idol contestant, for a virtual story time! Family members play an important role as young children’s first and most important teachers. Find a cozy corner in your home and spend some time reading together. There are many advantages to reading to your child including strengthening your bond, increasing their vocabulary, improving cognitive development, enhancing focus and boosting memory.
Smart Start Early Learning Facility
The Early Learning Facility (ELF) has something for everyone; resource materials, including books for parents, curriculum books for teachers, children's books, theme boxes, puzzles, games, musical instruments, videos, CD's & more! The ELF is a lending library with thousands of items available for members to check out. You may reserve resources or pick them up onsite. Schedule curbside pickup and or/drop off by calling Jennifer at 910-212-6352.
Smart Start Education Awards
Columbus County Partnership for Children (Smart Start) Education Award offers local, qualifying individuals financial support in completing classes in the Early Childhood or related fields.
As part of the Partnership’s commitment to the improvement of early care and education quality, the education awards encourage higher education among child care professionals. Sixteen teachers, representing nine early childhood education programs, received education awards for courses completed during summer & fall semesters of 2021. Of the recipients, one earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Birth-Kindergarten Education, another is working towards a Birth-Kindergarten Add-On Licensure, three are working towards a Bachelor of Science Degree in Birth-Kindergarten Education, and 11 are working towards Early Childhood Associate Degrees. The financial support provided by the Education Awards serves to diminish the financial barrier that often delays or prevents the completion of an educational program.
Following are comments from recent recipients of education awards.
“Receiving an education award will help me by giving me the motivation to want to continue my education in the Early Childhood Education field. The education award helps me provide new materials for my class as well” said A.R. Singletary, with Child Care Professionals.
“This education award will assist me to pay on bills (especially medical ones) and gas for upcoming classes. This award has made me feel better about myself as an educator. Not only am I learning; but I’m getting paid while I do it” said C. Mitchell, with Beverly’s Day Care Center.
The Smart Start Education Award not only benefits the recipients, but also the child care programs where the recipients are employed. Early educators working with children ages birth Continued from page 9 Education to five years old at any star-rated, temporarily licensed or GS110 childcare facility in Columbus County may be eligible to apply. Transcripts must be submitted with all applications. Applications for the Spring 2022 awards are due May 27, 2022.
For applications and additional information about the education award process, contact Sandra Newkirk at sandra.newkirk@columbussmartstart.org or call 910-499-4547
Resilient Columbus, funded by Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, is a coalition of stakeholders and family leaders addressing Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and building resiliency in Columbus County by educating within the community.
Flyers and brochures are being circulated and informational sessions are being provided to the faith community, school systems, and local agencies. The coalition also offers virtual and in-person screenings of the film, Resilience –The Biology of Stress and The Science of Hope. The goal of Resilient Columbus is that all families, businesses, service organizations and faith communities in Columbus County are trauma informed and resilient.
For more information about the coalition or how to register for a film screening or information session, contact Sherry Baldwin at 910-642-8226 Ext. 109. Like the Resilient Columbus: Columbus County Resiliency Task Force Facebook page.
Dolly Parton's Imagination Library
The Columbus County Partnership for Children (Smart Start) and Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library are still working together to get books into the hands of each eligible child in Columbus County.
Research has shown that “children who are read to at an early age are more successful in school and that reading aloud to infants and children encourages social, emotional and cognitive development. The ability to learn language skills is greatest before the age of six and children who are read to have bigger vocabularies when they enter school." Adults who read just one book a day with a child will reach 1,000 books in less than three years.https://1000booksbeforekindergarten.org/.
Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library was first launched in 1995 in singer, actress and author Dolly Parton’s home state of Tennessee. Her vision included promoting a love of reading in preschool aged children as well as their families. She wanted every child to have books regardless of their family’s income. Thanks to the Imagination Library, many families across Columbus County enjoy receiving their child’s monthly book.
In 2021, 24,519 books were mailed to Columbus County Children and nearly 90,000 total books since the program’s inception. This year, Smart Start celebrated the milestone of providing 10 Million books to children statewide since 2017.
One Columbus County mom, Kayla Hinson, stated, “We love receiving our monthly books for our daughter! Such a joy to see her face light up when we open a new book and read together as a family! This program is such a blessing to children everywhere and we appreciate our county’s partnership with Imagination Library.”
All children, ages birth to 5 years old (children must be within 10 weeks of their fifth birthday to receive books) who are residents of Columbus County are eligible to participate. The number of books each child receives will depend on the age of the child at registration. Children can potentially collect a 60-volume set of books from the birth to 5 time frames. Eligible children will receive high-quality, age appropriate books mailed directly to their home each month until their fifth birthday. This project is made possible through funding appropriated by the North Carolina Legislature.
For more information about the Imagination Library and how to register, contact Gloria Riddick, at gloria.riddick@columbussmartstart.org or 910-642-8226 Ext. 110.
Partnership Activities for 2021-2022
Dolly Parton's Imagination Library
The Imagination Library provides books to children living in Columbus County. Each month, children ages birth to five, who are registered for the program receive a brand new book mailed directly to their homes. The books are free of charge to the family. For more information, call 910-212-6352.
Quality Enhancement Project
This project helps licensed child care programs increase the level of star rated licensure and the level of provider education. Professional Development services are also available for facilities that complete an Educational Facility Plan. Teachers in these facilities who are attending school may be eligible for Educational Awards. For assistance, call 910-642-8226.
Raising A Reader
This project helps child care providers work with families to build and maintain the home-based language and literacy experiences young children need for later school success. By rotating high quality children’s literature into homes each week, Raising A Reader’s research-based program helps children and parents develop the habit of “book cuddling.” Families also build the connections to libraries that result in lasting family literacy habits and improved outcomes for children. For assistance, call 910-642-8226.
Reach Out and Read
This project prepares America’s youngest children to succeed by partnering with doctors to prescribe books and encourages families to read together. At each well child visit, children between the age of six months and five years receive brand new, age and developmentally appropriate books to keep and their parents receive guidance on the importance of reading aloud to their children. For assistance, call 910-642-8226.
Ready, Set, Go!
This activity provides early identification of special needs and enhances the provision of early intervention services to ensure positive outcomes for all children ages birth to five in child care settings. For assistance, call 910-618-9260.
Smart Start Early Learning Facility (ELF)
The Early Learning Facility provides child development resources which parents and providers can use to enhance the early care and education of young children. A variety of children’s books, videos, topic resource books, educational resource kits, and other resources are available for check out through our contactless curbside service to ELF library members. For assistance, call 910-212-6352.
Smart Start Subsidy
This scholarship program provides assistance with the cost of child care to qualified parents with children ages birth to five. For assistance, call 910-642-3178.
Transportation
Expectant mothers and children ages birth to five who are not eligible for Medicaid reimbursable transportation can be transported to and from medical appointments. For assistance, call Joy Jacobs at 910-642-7201
WAGE$
This project provides child care professionals with education-based salary supplements and addresses teacher turnover and increased teacher educational levels. For assistance, call Allison Miller at 919-967-3272.
Biblioteca de imaginación de Dolly Parton
La Biblioteca de Imaginación de Dolly Parton ofrece libros para niños que viven en el Condado de Columbus. Cada mes, los niños de entre 5 y 5 años de edad, que están registrados en el programa, reciben un libro nuevo enviado directamente a sus hogares. Los libros son gratuitos para la familia. Para más información, llame al 910-212-6352.
Proyecto del realce de calidad
Este proyecto ayuda a los programas de cuidado infantil certificados a incrementar el nivel de rendimiento y el nivel de educación provehida. Servicios profesionales del desarrollo estan disponibles para facilidades que completen un Plan Educativo. Maestros en estas facilidades que asisten a las escuelas pueden ser eligibles para resivir un Premio Educativo. Llame 910-642-8226.
Creando un lector
Esta actividad con los centros de cuidado infantil o guarderías con licencias promueve el intercambio diario de libros entre los padres y sus hijos. Cada niño recibirá una brillante bolsa roja llena de libros de alta calidad, libros apropiados para la edad de sus hijos que se rotaran semanalmente. Llame 910-642-8226.
Lee y Alcanzaras
Lee y alcanzaras prepara a los niños más pequenos de Estados Unidos a tener éxito en su futuro, esto lo hacen asociándose con los medicos que prescriben libros a sus pacientes para alentar a las familias a leer juntos. En cada visita para su chequeo físico anual, los niños entre la edad de seis meses y cinco años reciben libros nuevos apropiados para su desarrollo y los padres reciben también orientación sobre la importancia de leerle a sus hijos. Para más información llame 910-642-8226.
¡En sus marcas, listos, fuera!
Esta actividad provee temprana identificación de las necesidades especiales y mejora la temprana intervención en los servicios y asegurar resultados positivos para todos los niños desde la edad del nacimiento hasta los cinco años en los centros de cuidado infantil o guarderías. Llame 910-618-9260.
Smart Start Centro de Aprendizaje Temprano
La centro de aprendizaje temprano provee recursos de desarrollo infantil que padres y proveedores pueden usar para el crecimiento del cuidado y la educación temprana para los bebes y niños.La variedad de libros para niños, videos, libros con temas de recursos, artículos y juguetes, computadora con acceso al internet y otros recursos que están disponibles para los miembros de la centro a un minimo pago. Entrenamientos y cursos como también materiales en español. Llame 910-212-6352.
Smart Start Subcidio
Este programa de becas provee asistencia con los costos para el cuidado de niños para calificar padres con niños desde la edad del nacimiento hasta los cinco años. Llame 910-642-3178.
Transportacion
Madres embarazadas y con niños recién nacidos hasta la edad de cinco años que no son elegibles para el reembolso del Medicaid también pueden ser transportadas, y para sus citas medicas. Llame Joy Jacobs en 910-642-7201.
Pagos       
Este proyecto provee de profesionales del cuidado infantil, suplementos educación-basada del sueldo y trata volumen de ventas del profesor y niveles de enseñanza, crecimientos del profesor. Llame Allison Miller en 919-967-3272.
Your donation is a great way to get involved with the community and the best way to make a difference in the future of a child. Columbus County Partnership for Children accepts donations of services, products, and monetary contributions.
All donations are tax deductible.

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