WASHINGTON,
Jan. 2010 –
Most military
children
attend
non-Defense
Department
schools, but
military
officials are
determined not
to allow their
unique needs
to slip
through the
cracks.
The
Office of
Military
Community and
Family Policy
has expanded
its Military
and Family
Life
Consultant
program to
encompass
non-Defense
Department
schools. More
than 90
percent of
military
children
attend public,
private and
charter
schools,
officials
said.
“Many
schools have
guidance
counselors and
school
counselors
with
behavioral
health
backgrounds,”
said Barbara
Thompson,
director of
the Defense
Department’s
Office of
Family
Policy/Children
and Youth.
“But we’re
augmenting and
increasing
understanding
of what a
military child
is going
through; what
it’s like to
be a child in
school with a
deployed
parent.”
The Military
and Family
Life
Consultant
program offers
nonmedical
counseling
support to
military
members and
their families
on and off
military
installations,
both stateside
and overseas,
officials
said.
The child and
youth
behavioral
military and
family life
consultants
are a
specialized
portion of
that program.
The
consultants
are trained to
apply their
skills in
addressing
youth-related
issues such as
problem
solving,
bullying,
conflict
resolution,
self-esteem,
coping with
deployment and
reunion,
relationships
and
separations.
The youth
consultants
provide
services at
child
development
centers, youth
programs,
Defense
Department
schools, and
most recently,
non-Defense
Department
schools with a
large number
of students
from military
families. The
off-base
school program
started last
spring at 24
military-connected
schools and,
as of today,
about 120
child and
youth
behavioral
consultants
are supporting
151 schools,
Thompson said.
“We started
slowly at
locations with
high
deployment
rates,” she
said, “and
the feedback
was, ‘This
was the best
thing you
could have
done for
us.’”
Officials
first decided
to expand the
program to
counter a
marked
increase in
behavioral
issues,
Thompson said.
“The child
and youth
program
managers for
the services
came to us to
say they were
concerned that
they’d seen
a spike of
challenging
behaviors on
the
installation-based
programs,”
she said.
Consultants
already were
working with
adults,
Thompson said,
but officials
felt those
services could
be adapted for
children and
youth to meet
the growing
need.
The
specialized
consultants
began working
in Department
of Defense
Education
Activity
schools and
summer camps,
youth programs
and child
development
centers.
While
effective,
“We realized
there’s a
gap; we can
only serve so
many
children,”
Thompson said.
“We need to
branch out and
reach out.”
A child and
youth
behavioral
specialist in
Arkansas
started the
effort by
reaching out
to schools
with large
populations of
military
students. He
was invited in
and discovered
that many
teachers
weren’t
aware they
even had
military
children in
their schools
when, in fact,
many students
had parents in
the Guard and
Reserve, some
of whom were
deployed.
The program
took off from
there,
Thompson said.
Her office
began to seek
people out
from within
the community
to assist the
schools. “We
try to find
people
locally, but
if we can’t,
we will deploy
people to
travel
there,” she
said.
Within the
school, the
consultants’
role is to
work with
staff,
teachers and
parents to set
up support
groups and
offer
observations
and helpful
tips. Thompson
called it a
“global,
psycho-educational
approach.”
The program is
another step
toward
addressing the
unique
challenges
military
children and
their families
face, Thompson
said.
“[Recent]
studies show
deployments
have an impact
on our
children,”
she said, also
citing a
recent study
published in
the New
England
Journal of
Medicine that
reveals the
impact of
deployment on
Army
spouses’
mental health.
“We know
when a
stay-at-home
parent is
impacted with
mental health
issues; it can
impact how
they’re
taking care of
their
children.
“There’s
solid research
out there that
can really
drive what we
do, hone what
we do,” she
continued.
“We have
anecdotal
feedback on
how important
these assets
have been,
reinforcing
the need to
develop
preventive
programs so
issues don’t
escalate to a
more
exacerbated
level.”
Thompson said
she’s
optimistic the
child and
youth-specialized
counselors can
make a
difference for
families. This
summer, plans
are under way
to have them
work in
various summer
camps for
military
children,
including
those
sponsored by
the education
activity and
the Guard and
Reserve.
The feedback
so far has
been amazing,
Thompson said.
“Absolutely
everybody
loves them,”
she said.