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Partnership to Address
Violence Through Education (PAVE)
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| Pave created a
unique violence prevention and intervention
training process for early childhood educators.
CEED staff and consultants use the PAVE
principles and strategies in conference
presentations, university courses, and trainings
throughout Minnesota. CEED staff and consultants
are available to present workshops and conference
presentations on infant mental health and related
topics (see Professional
Development).
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PAVE
Library
The PAVE Project established a library of
books, videos, and other resources on the topics of domestic violence;
violence in the media; policy and advocacy; peaceful ways of living;
peaceful ways of teaching, guidance, discipline, and developing empathy;
curriculum activities and strategies; literature for children; the
effects of violence on children; child abuse; and parenting. Materials
from the PAVE library, in addition to other resources, are available for
loan at the Debra S. Fish Early Childhood Resource Library, a
service of Resources for Child Caring, 10 Yorkton Court, St. Paul, MN,
55117-1065. The library is open from
8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. The librarian can be reached at 651-641-3544
or
library@resourcesforchildcare.org.
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About
This Project
The PAVE Project, originally
funded through a federal grant, developed a unique
training process for early childhood educators, the
principles and strategies of which are being used by CEED
staff and community providers. As a result of the PAVE
Project, faculty from St. Paul Technical College, Minneapolis
Technical College, and the University of Minnesota
collaborated with local professionals to refine existing
Early Childhood Education Curricula to include a focus on
violence prevention and intervention (see
Courses and Trainings).
A 1995 PAVE FALL INSTITUTE was
held for professionals working in child care centers.
This unique, interactive training provided an opportunity
for 70 teachers to reflect on the qualities that make
their classrooms safe, nurturing places for the young
children they serve. The action plans they developed are
still being implemented. Networking with other early
childhood professionals was an important part of the FALL INSTITUTE.
Additional activities conducted
during the 1995-96 academic year helped achieve the PAVE
goal of providing violence prevention and intervention
information to urban professionals working with young
children in high crime, low income neighborhoods. PAVE:
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The PAVE Program and the
activities it supported were based on the following
mission and goals: |
Mission
Create a safer environment for early childhood
educators and the children and families they serve in the
Minneapolis and St. Paul neighborhoods with the highest
rates of poverty and violence.
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Goals
- Provide early childhood educators with the
opportunity for reflection and self-discovery
regarding violence and its affect on their
working environment, the children and families
they serve, their communities, and the broader
society
- Provide information on important issues
related to violence prevention and intervention
including the effects of violence on children,
the resilience of children, families and
communities, and ways to build nurturing, safe
learning places
- Enhance skills needed by early childhood
educators to foster a nurturing environment,
including the use of their own creativity, values
and guidance, cultural competence, and building
upon the strengths of children, their families
and the community
- Develop networking opportunities for
participants so they can connect with other
professionals who have similar goals
- Develop individual and team action plans
to promote safer, more peaceful classrooms
- Support early childhood educators in their
role as leaders within their communities,
especially in the area of violence prevention.
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Training Process
"This program
cannot be put in words
but will be forever in my heart.
I would love to have PAVE reach
every child care provider
nation-wide."
The PAVE Institute is a unique
interactive training process designed to meet the needs
of early childhood professionals as they confront the
reality of violence in the lives of children and
families. Developed by consultants Margie Carter and
Charlie Murphy and the PAVE staff -- with input from
early childhood educators in the Minneapolis/St. Paul
community -- the Institute has challenged educators from
30 child care centers in St. Paul and Minneapolis with
two guiding principles for violence prevention and
intervention:
- the imagination and creativity of early
childhood educators, not formulas or systems, are
the most effective tools for countering the
violence in children's lives
- early childhood educators play key leadership
roles, both at their centers and within their
communities at large, in violence intervention
A group of ten educators from
the two cities was convened to act as facilitators for
the training: to provide input in the planning stages and
to assist with implementing the Institute. These field
representatives have in turn honed their own leadership
skills in the process. During the Institute, the 60 Institute participants (attending in pairs form their
centers) developed both individual and team action plans
for violence prevention and intervention. In many cases
these plans have brought about major changes in their
child care centers.
"This model
brought out the power in individuals...
voices that will
be heard."
In September and again in
November 1995 the teams of educators were brought
together for two days of training. The training processes
were in both cases structured as personal journeys toward
the key concepts above: imagination and leadership. An
underlying assumption was that the participants bring a
vast array of knowledge and skills to the issue of
violence: that their work with children and families has
afforded them numerous strategies that already are -- or
can be -- translated to confronting violence.
The September Institute flowed
through the following series of activities:
The November Institute continued
with:
A variety of representatives
from the community, including youth, presented at the
Institute. Some provided their own stories of resilience;
others offered opportunities for PAVE participants to contribute to community-wide activities.
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Foundation Beliefs
The training process of the
Institute was built upon the following core ideas:
"The great
things I see changing from this Institute lie more within
myself than anything children and families have done so
far.
But with a renewed dedication to myself as a leader
in my community,
I feel anything is possible."
Another Web site:
Child
Abuse Prevention Studies (CAPS)
http://www.mincava.umn.edu
Located at the Web site of MINCAVA: Minnesota Center
Against Violence and Abuse Electronic Clearinghouse,
College of Human Ecology, School of Social Work,
University of Minnesota, this project is designed to
build the interdisciplinary nature of CAPS and bring
together a team of faculty experts in child abuse
prevention.
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Some
CEED Publications on Violence
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