Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years

About This Program

Target Population: Parents of families who have been reported to the child welfare system for child maltreatment including physical and emotional maltreatment in addition to child neglect; may be used as a court-ordered parenting program

For parents/caregivers of children ages: 5 – 11

Program Overview

The Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School Age Children 5 to 11 Years is a 15-session program that is group-based, and family-centered. During group sessions, parents and their children attend separate groups that meet concurrently. Each session is scheduled for 2.5 hours with a 20-minute break in which parents and children get together and have fun.

The lessons in the program are based on the known parenting behaviors that contribute to child maltreatment:

  • Inappropriate parental expectations
  • Parental lack of empathy in meeting the needs of their children
  • Strong belief in the use of corporal punishment
  • Reversing parent-child family roles
  • Oppressing children's power and independence

Assessment (pre, process, and post) of parent's parenting and child rearing beliefs, knowledge, and skills allows the program facilitators to measure the attainment of lesson competencies.

Program Goals

The overall goals of Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years are:

  • Achieve measurable gains in individual self-worth and the self-worth of their children
  • Achieve measurable gains in empathy and meeting their own adult needs in healthy ways
  • Achieve measurable gains in empathy towards meeting the needs of their children
  • Increase in use of dignified and nonviolent disciplinary strategies and practices
  • Achieve measurable gains in self-empowerment and that of their children
  • Achieve measurable gains in nurturing parenting beliefs, knowledge, and utilization of skills and strategies as measured by program assessment inventories
  • Reunify with their children who are in foster care
  • Attend each session and complete the Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11
  • Decrease likelihood of recidivism

Logic Model

View the Logic Model for Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years.

Essential Components

The essential components of Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years include:

  • Parents complete two inventories at the beginning and end of the program:
    • The Adult-Adolescent Parenting Inventory (AAPI-2) is a norm referenced inventory designed to assess parenting beliefs in five parenting practices recognized as contributing to child maltreatment:
      • Inappropriate developmental expectations of children
      • Lack of parental empathy towards children's needs
      • Strong parental belief in the use of physical punishment
      • Reversing parent-child family roles
      • Oppressing Children's power and independence.
    • The Nurturing Skills Competency Scale (NSCS) is a criterion reference inventory designed to gather information in six areas:
      • Current parental life conditions
      • Childhood history
      • Relationship with partner
      • Relationship with children
      • Knowledge of nurturing parenting practices
      • Utilization of nurturing parenting skills
  • Parents and facilitator meet to review the results of the assessments:
    • Parenting strengths and deficiencies are discussed.
    • Lessons in the program are reviewed to ensure parenting deficiencies are being covered.
  • Lessons are competency-based:
    • Each lesson has measurable competencies.
    • Parents and facilitator review the competencies at the beginning of the session.
    • Parents evaluate how well they learned the competencies.
    • Lessons are repeated for parents who have not learned the lesson competencies.
  • Lessons that comprise the parent portion of the program (more than one lesson is taught per session):
    • Children's Brain development
    • Nurturing as a Lifestyle
    • Ages and Stages of Development
    • Developing Empathy in Parents and Children
    • Meeting our Needs and the Needs of our Children
    • Recognizing and Understanding Feelings
    • Helping Your Children Handle their Feelings
    • Improving Your Children's Self Worth
    • Developing Personal Power in Children and Adults
    • Understanding Discipline
    • Red, White and Bruises: Why Parents Spank
    • Developing Family Morals and Values
    • Developing Family Rules
    • Rewarding Children and their Behavior
    • Punishments for Inappropriate Behavior
    • Praise for Being and Doing
    • Establishing Nurturing Parenting Routines
    • Our Bodies and Sex
    • Personal Space and Saying "No"
    • Keeping our Children Safe
    • Managing Anger and Stress
    • Loss and Grief
    • Trauma
    • Alternatives to Spanking
    • Ignoring Inappropriate Behavior
    • Possessive and Violent Relationships
    • Families and Alcohol
    • Keeping Kids Drug Free
    • Criticism and Confrontation
    • Problem Solving, Decision Making, Negotiation, and Compromise
    • People, Possessions, and Self-Talk
  • Lessons that comprise the 5-11 portion of the program include:
    • Making Classroom Rules
    • Picture Myself and My Family
    • Getting to Know You
    • Me Mobile
    • Circle Time: Learning to use "I Messages" to Communicate Feelings
    • Art Activity: Making a Silhouette of Me
    • I'm Someone Special Discussion and Art Activity
    • Nurturing Board Game
    • Nurturing Coloring Books
    • Circle Time: Using My Personal Power
    • Art Activity: Making Personal Power Vests
    • Circle Time: Praise and Criticism
    • Art Activity: Warm Fuzzies and Cold Pricklies
    • Circle Time: Strength Bombardment
    • Circle Time: Gentle and Hurting Touch
    • Art Activity: Putting Our best Foot Forward Foot Mural
    • Art Activity: Giant Self-Drawing
    • Circle Time: Morals and Values: Doing the Right and Wrong Thing
    • Circle Time: Choices and Consequences
    • Art Activity: Shaving Cream
    • Art Activity: Making a Group Hand Mural
    • Art Activity: Finger Painting
    • Circle Time: Owning our Bodies
    • Circle Time: Saying No
    • Circle Time: Keeping Secrets
    • Circle Time: Staying Safe
    • Circle Time: Telling Others
    • Circle Time: Handling Bullies
    • Circle Time: Don't Keep it to Yourself
    • Circle Time: Expressing our Anger
    • Circle Time: How to Express our Anger Energy
    • Art Activity: Anger Masks
    • Circle Time: Saying No to Drugs and Yes to Life
    • Circle Time: Sex, Sexuality, STDs and AIDS (for older children when appropriate)
    • Circle Time: Saying Goodbye to our Friends

Program Delivery

Parent/Caregiver Services

Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years directly provides services to parents/caregivers and addresses the following:

  • Attachment issues between parent and child, abusive disciplinary practices, neglecting children's basic needs, lack of supervision, oppressing children's power and independence, trauma in the family, families in substance abuse recovery, families in mental health systems; parents of children with oppressed affect, low self-worth, lack of empowerment, bully-like or victim-like behaviors, overly clingy or withdrawn behavior, and separation anxiety 
Services Involve Family/Support Structures:

This program involves the family or other support systems in the individual's treatment: Extended family members are invited to participate in the group sessions when appropriate.

Recommended Intensity:

2.5-hour weekly session

Recommended Duration:

15 weeks

Delivery Setting

This program is typically conducted in a(n):

  • Community-based Agency / Organization / Provider

Homework

Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years includes a homework component:

Lesson-focused assignments are given that address the need to practice new skills.

Languages

Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years has materials available in languages other than English:

Arabic, Chinese, Haitian Creole, Hmong, Spanish

For information on which materials are available in these languages, please check on the program's website or contact the program representative (contact information is listed at the bottom of this page).

Resources Needed to Run Program

The typical resources for implementing the program are:

For group sessions, space needs are a room capable of seating 15 adults comfortably; a large room for the children's program, preferably in a day care/nursery setting; DVD player and monitor, flip chart/white board and markers. Two facilitators are required to implement the adult program and two additional facilitators are required to implement the children's program; depending on the number of children attending, additional staff may be required. Adults and children join together at the end of the group session.

Manuals and Training

Prerequisite/Minimum Provider Qualifications

There is no minimum educational level requirement for being trained on the program, but experience facilitating adult groups and children's groups and knowledge of developmental skills for children 5 to 11 years is required.

Manual Information

There is a manual that describes how to deliver this program.

Program Manual(s)

Bavolek, S. J. (n.d.). Parents & their school-age children 5-11 years - Activities manual for parents. http://nurturingparenting.com/shop/p/32/Parents%20&%20Their%20School-Age%20Children%205-11%20Years%20-%20Activities%20Manual%20for%20Parents%20(NP1AMP)

Training Information

There is training available for this program.

Training Contact:
Training Type/Location:

Onsite, if desired, or regional area trainings

Number of days/hours:

Three days for 7 hours a day

Implementation Information

Pre-Implementation Materials

There are no pre-implementation materials to measure organizational or provider readiness for Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years.

Formal Support for Implementation

There is formal support available for implementation of Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years as listed below:

Family Development Resources provides technical assistance in purchasing the appropriate program materials and setting up the online assessment site. The Family Nurturing Centers will provide technical assistance after the initial training. Centers also provide fidelity implementation monitoring and advanced implementation on the assessments and implementation. Contact information can be found at the end of the page.

Fidelity Measures

There are fidelity measures for Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years as listed below:

Trained observations, self/other checklists More details available from program representative. Contact information can be found at the end of the page.

Implementation Guides or Manuals

There are implementation guides or manuals for Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years as listed below:

The implementation manual can be found at: https://www.nurturingparenting.com/images/cmsfiles/sjbworkbook18thedition10-3-16.pdf

In addition to initial training and curriculum purchase, for fidelity of implementation and data analysis of assessments throughout the program year, providers and agencies that implement Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years are encouraged to add extra days into their support services.

Implementation Cost

There are no studies of the costs of Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years.

Research on How to Implement the Program

Research has not been conducted on how to implement Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years.

Relevant Published, Peer-Reviewed Research

Child Welfare Outcomes: Safety and Child/Family Well-Being

Cowen, P. S. (2001). Effectiveness of a parent education intervention for at-risk families. Journal of the Society of Pediatric Nursing, 6(2), 73–82. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-6155.2001.tb00124.x

Type of Study: One-group pretest–posttest study
Number of Participants: 154 families

Population:

  • Age — Not specified
  • Race/Ethnicity — 92% White
  • Gender — Not specified
  • Status — Participants were self-referred families, families in crisis, and families court-referred for mandatory attendance.

Location/Institution: National Committee for the Prevention of Child Abuse, Iowa Chapter

Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
The purpose of the study was to examine parents attending the Nurturing Parenting Program [now called Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years]. Measures utilized include the Adult-Adolescent Parenting Inventory, which is designed to measure attitudes about childrearing practices. Results indicate that posttest scores showed statistically significant improvements in inappropriate expectations, low empathy, strong belief in value of punishment, and role reversal. Limitations include lack of a control group, a substantial percentage of available families did not fully participate or provided incomplete data, and lack of follow-up.

Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: None.

Devall, E. L. (2004). Positive parenting for high-risk families. Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 96(4), 22–28. https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ736889

Type of Study: One-group pretest–posttest study
Number of Participants: 323 parents

Population:

  • Age — 14–70 years (Mean=27 years)
  • Race/Ethnicity — 60% Hispanic, 21% European American, 10% Native American, 4% African American, and 3% Asian American or Other
  • Gender — 40% Male
  • Status — Participants were at-risk families, including teen parents, unmarried parents, single or divorce parents, foster parents, parents referred by social services, families with substance abuse issues, and incarcerated parents.

Location/Institution: New Mexico

Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the efficacy of the Nurturing Parenting Program [now called Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years] offered in schools, community centers, public health offices, family resource centers and in prisons for incarcerated parents. Measures utilized include the Adult-Adolescent Parenting Inventory, the Nurturing Quiz, and the Family Social History Questionnaire. Results indicate improvement on inappropriate expectations, empathy, belief in corporal punishment, and role-reversal. Scores on the Nurturing Quiz also improved significantly. Limitations include lack of a control group, low rates of completion for the entire curriculum, and lack of follow-up.

Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: None.

Matthew, R. F., Wang, M. Q., Bellamy, N., & Copeland, E. (2005). Test of efficacy of model family strengthening programs. American Journal of Health Studies, 20(3/4), 164–170. https://www.proquest.com/openview/1be1a4f0e20b0c425ed4db817c0c15c9/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=30166

Type of Study: Pretest–posttest study with a nonequivalent control group (Quasi-experimental)
Number of Participants: 1080

Population:

  • Age — Parents: Not specified; Children: Mean=11 years
  • Race/Ethnicity — Not specified
  • Gender — Children: Not specified; Parents: 74% Female and 17% Male
  • Status — Participants were from Family Strengthening Initiative funded by the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention (CSAP).

Location/Institution: Not Specified

Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the efficacy of Strengthening Multi-Ethnic Families & Communities, Parenting Wisely, Strengthening Families Program, and the Nurturing Parenting Program [now called Nurturing Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years]. Data was obtained from a total of thirty-two funded study sites that implemented an evidence-based model program. However, only program sites that adopted one of the aforementioned four model programs were included in data analyses. Measures utilized include the Family Environment Scale (FES) Form R. Results indicate that there were differential effects of these model programs. For family attachment and family cohesion, the Nurturing Parenting Program appeared to be the most effective among all the model programs. Limitations include lack of control group and lack of follow-up.

Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: None.

Vespo, J. E., Capece, D., & Behforooz, B. (2006). Effects of the nurturing curriculum on social, emotional, and academic behaviors in kindergarten classrooms. Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 20(4). 275–285. https://doi.org/10.1080/02568540609594567

Type of Study: Pretest–posttest study with a nonequivalent control group (Quasi-experimental)
Number of Participants: 143 (135 children and 8 adults)

Population:

  • Age — Children - Kindergartners(approximately age 4-6 years)
  • Race/Ethnicity — Children (Intervention School 1 and Intervention School 2): 57% and 54% White; 31% and 29% African American; 11% and 12% Hispanic; and 3% and 5% Asian.
  • Gender — Children - 75 Females and 65 Males
  • Status — Participants were children and teachers from an inner city school district.

Location/Institution: Northeastern United States

Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the efficacy of the Nurturing Parenting Program [now called Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years] on children in kindergarten classrooms. Kindergarten teachers at two selected school sites were trained in the Nurturing Parenting Program. Children in the targeted classes were compared to 14 children who attended the same school in the year prior to the study. Measures utilized include the Teacher Checklist of Social Behavior. Results indicate that the Nurturing Parenting Program curriculum was associated with improvement in social and emotional behaviors. Limitations include the limited nature of the control group, nonrandomization of school or teachers to the intervention, small sample size, and lack of follow-up. Note: Since the study did not involve any intervention with parents, this study was not used in rating for the Parent Training topic area.

Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: None.

Brock, D. J. P., Marek, L. I., Kerney, C. M., & Bagby, T. (2013). Open groups: Adaptations in implementing a parent training program. Health Promotion Perspectives, 3(2), 230–241. https://doi.org/10.5681/hpp.2013.026

Type of Study: Pretest–posttest study with a nonequivalent control group (Quasi-experimental)
Number of Participants: 225 enrolled; 129 completed at least 80% of the offered sessions and were used in the analyses

Population:

  • Age — 13–50+ years
  • Race/Ethnicity — 75% Caucasian, 22% African-American, 2% Hispanic, and 1% Other
  • Gender — 69% Female
  • Status — Participants for both formats were recruited through advertising in local newspapers and radio stations, flyers distributed to public places, and brochures and class information distributed at various community agencies/organizations.

Location/Institution: Virginia

Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
The purpose of the study was to evaluate the efficacy of the Nurturing Parenting Program [now called Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years] in two different formats, the typical closed-group format, or an open-group format that allowed for on-going admission. Participants were recruited through similar means and the format placement for each family was determined by the immediacy of the need for an intervention, the time lapse until a new cycle would begin, and scheduling flexibility. Measures utilized include the Adult Adolescent Parenting Inventory-version 2 (AAPI-2). Results indicate that though open groups contained higher risk families, parental outcome improvements were significant for both groups. All participants, regardless of group membership demonstrated statistically significant improvements following completion of the program. There were significant differences found in terms of retention rates, with open group members being significantly less likely to complete the sessions (44% versus 76% in the closed group). Limitations include the differences between the two groups at baseline, differences between the intervention delivered in the two groups (the open-group format did not include the child component of the program, while the closed-group format did), high attrition rates in the open-group sample, and lack of follow-up.

Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: None.

Kelley, S. J., Whitley, D. M., & Campos, P. E. (2019). Differential impact of an Intervention for grandmothers raising grandchildren. Journal of Intergenerational Relationships, 17(2), 141–162. https://doi.org/10.1080/15350770.2018.1535351

Type of Study: One-group pretest–posttest study
Number of Participants: 549

Population:

  • Age — 33–83 years (Mean=56.27 years)
  • Race/Ethnicity — 100% African American
  • Gender — 100% Female
  • Status — Participants were predominantly low-income grandmothers raising grandchildren.

Location/Institution: Virginia

Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
The purpose of the study was to determine the efficacy of the Nurturing Parenting Program for Parents and their School-age Children 5 to 11 Years to decrease psychological distress in caregiving grandmothers, as well as to determine if select demographic characteristics influence intervention outcomes. Participants were recruited through similar means and the format placement for each family was determined by the immediacy of the need for an intervention, the time lapse until a new cycle would begin, and scheduling flexibility. Measures utilized include the Brief symptom inventory (BSI). Results indicate that psychological distress scores decreased significantly from pretest to posttest. The intervention appears to have benefited distressed grandmothers who are young, unmarried, or unemployed. Limitations include lack of generalizability due to ethnicity of participants, lack of comparison group, and lack of follow-up.

Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: None.

Additional References

Bavolek, S. J. (n.d.). Assessment, evaluation and research: Examining parenting history, beliefs, knowledge and skills. Retrieved from http://nurturingparenting.com/ecommerce/category.i?cmd=searchlist

Bavolek, S. J. (2014). Nurturing Parenting Programs facilitator training workbook and program implementation guide. Retrieved from http://nurturingparenting.com/images/cmsfiles/npw16final12-20-2013.pdf

Contact Information

Bernie Kopecky
Agency/Affiliation: Family Development Resources, Inc.
Website: nurturingparenting.com/ecommerce/category/1:3:2
Email:
Phone: (435) 649-5822
JoanMarie Dellinger
Agency/Affiliation: Family Development Resources, Inc.
Website: nurturingparenting.com/ecommerce/catagory/1:3:2
Email:
Phone: (262) 652-6501

Date Research Evidence Last Reviewed by CEBC: December 2022

Date Program Content Last Reviewed by Program Staff: January 2021

Date Program Originally Loaded onto CEBC: April 2014