Neglect can be very difficult to identify and minimize. Parents who experience poverty, live in low-income neighborhoods, raise children as single parents, and receive little to no educational training are at higher risk of neglecting their children. Programs like the Child-Parent Center program encourages interactions between children and their parents as well as parents and the schools their children attend. In a study by Mersky and Reynolds (2009), they compare the children within the Child-Parent program to other public kindergarten programs to see how the children fares in regards to lower rates of neglect.
The Child-Parent Center program was first established in 1967. Through Title 1 funding, it became the second oldest federally funded preschool program in the country with Head Start being the first of its kind. Chicago became a place for the Child-Parent Center program to set up programs within the city's most impoverished neighborhoods. It was meant to help children who were not in Head Start receive the services they needed. These programs allow for children to receive the help necessary to perform well in school and also teaches parents to bond with their children and opens them up to training and potential job opportunities.
Thanks to these programs, neglect rates have been shown to decrease with parents who actively participate in them. "Intensive family preservation services and parent training programs are among the primary mechanisms by which child welfare agencies might impact neglect rates" (Mersky, Topitzes, & Reynolds, 2009, p. 67). The service providers of the program have general eligibility requirements that must be met in order for the parent and child to participate...
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