Group
Helps Educators Reach Out to 'Suddenly Military' Children
By Rudi Williams
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, July 11, 2005 – Because of the high number
of National Guardsmen and Reservists fighting the global war on
terrorism, the Military Child Education Coalition has created
a program to teach educators and others how to help "suddenly
military" students of deployed citizen-soldiers.
The coalition established a workshop, called Supporting Children
and Families of Guard and Reserve Institute. The institute is
a professional development program to help schoolteachers, counselors,
administrators and members of the Guard and Reserve and their
families to reach out to the children of Guard and Reserve members.
"What we talk about in this course are issues and insights
to the kinds of things that children will deal with when a parent
deploys," said Joan Barrett, chair of MCEC's Guard and Reserve
initiative. The coalition ran a session of the workshop before
its recent conference in Atlanta.
"What moms and counselors are going to find, hopefully,
are clues to resilience -- how to deal with their child as they
experience the loss of the other parent to deployment and give
them some tools on how to come back and be a stronger, more resilient
child as a result of this," Barrett said.
Most workshop participants are volunteers or employees of Guard
and Reserve family programs all over the United States, Barrett
noted. Other attendees are school counselors who are "cognizant
of the need to support the kids whose parents have been deployed,"
she said.
"I think this is a phenomenal opportunity for school personnel
to become aware of what the issues and identifiers are for their
children whose parents are deployed," Barrett noted.
The purpose of the institute is to identify key folks within
each state's department of education, Barrett noted. "We
try to focus on one state at a time and identify key educators,
administrators and student-service personnel," she said.
"Workshop participants will take back information and concepts
to the personnel in their districts.
Guard and Reserve personnel are typically not clustered around
military installations, Barrett said. "So, therefore, they
don't have the same support services as active-duty personnel,"
she said. "They may not even be aware of what's available
to their kids."
The workshop helps participants understand what children's reactions
to a parent's deployment might be.
"Focus is the child," Barrett said, adding that, "there's
an essential connection between what happens to that child and
the parent that's left behind, or the caregiver that's not the
parent -- the aunt, uncle, grandma." Walter Yourstone, the
MCEC project director, pointed out that the nature of Guard and
Reserve duty has fundamentally changed with the global war on
terrorism. "We've gone from a mindset where Guard and Reserve
duty meant one weekend a month, two weeks a year, to a dynamic
where many guardsmen and reservists have been mobilized in the
U.S., or deployed overseas to combat duty," said Yourstone,
a retired Navy submarine captain from Kings Bay, Ga.
The He said deployments are happening more frequently, for longer
periods of time, and they're into combat zones. "We're also
seeing the cycle repeating itself where some servicemembers are
on their second, possibly third, deployment in support of the
global war on terrorism," Yourstone noted.
"What we're seeing is something that the active duty realizes
-- the necessity to provide strong family-support structures,"
he continued. The workshop also discusses the types of challenges
families and children face through the process of deployment and
the emotional cycle of deployment. This includes preparation for
return and the homecoming itself.
Organizers ask participants to identify folks who can sponsor
support networks for these "suddenly military families."
Since all states are impacted by the global war on terrorism,
Yourstone said, MCEC is trying to get as many states as possible
involved.
He pointed out that the first such workshop was conducted in
Texas in 2004 and a several workshops were piloted during the
past school year, training 241 persons. "We sat down in November
2004 and tried to craft a concept of this institute," Yourstone
noted. "
The coalition plans to institute training sessions in eight more
states the rest of this year. They include Georgia, Florida, South
and North Carolina, Tennessee, Washington, Texas and Maryland.
The organization earmarked these states because of their large
numbers of deployed guardsmen and reservists, said Larry Moehnke,
MCEC's chief of staff. On average, he noted, each state has had
at least 4,000 deployed at any given time. Ultimately, he added,
MCEC hopes to bring the workshop to 25 states annually.
Officials said to go to the MCEC Web site for more information
on the institute workshops. |