Centring community services around early childhood care and development: Promising practices in Indigenous communities in Canada

These communities are creating programs that are relevant and appropriately utilized by community members and that are helping to revitalize Indigenous knowledge and languages. All of the communities have committed to some degree of integrated service delivery consistent with their understanding of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jessica Ball
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1911
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.535.3426
http://www.childhealthandeducation.com/articles/documents/v1i4ppr1e-ball.pdf
Description
Summary:These communities are creating programs that are relevant and appropriately utilized by community members and that are helping to revitalize Indigenous knowledge and languages. All of the communities have committed to some degree of integrated service delivery consistent with their understanding of needing to support the ‘whole child ’ in the context of family-centred and community-centred practice. The predominant patchwork approach to services Most communities in Canada today maintain an individual-centred and non-integrated approach to family and children's services. In this fragmented model, people receiving services are conceived as individual cases with an array of separate needs, subject to servicing by an array of separate professional service providers. The fragmentation of training and services into increasingly differentiated domains of specialization corresponds to dominant cultural constructions of the child in psychology and education as a collection of ‘domains ’ of development, each with distinct proclivities, potential, and needs for different kinds of support. In First Nations communities, practitioners specializing in different domains of child and family health and development are usually located outside of the community, not just administratively, culturally, and socially but, in the case of rural and remote communities, geographically as well.