HOPE Innovation Network and the Importance of Policy
The HOPE NRC works directly with organizations to make HOPE-informed changes to their internal policies.
The HOPE NRC works directly with organizations to make HOPE-informed changes to their internal policies.
Over the summer, two of our high school interns, Emily Chen and Alina Ngo, worked on a project to translate HOPE resources into Mandarin and Vietnamese.
The HOPE National Resource Center intends to help policymakers know more about Positive Childhood Experiences (PCEs).
National Hispanic Heritage Month takes place from September 15 to October 15. HOPE recognizes how culture, heritage, and tradition play a large role in a child’s access to positive childhood experiences.
The HOPE National Resource Center is now on social media! We launched our social media in February of this year and have spent the past several months growing our presence on both Twitter and LinkedIn.
In addition to creating our own materials, we partner with child and family service organizations around the country to add HOPE to their services and resources. This blog highlights two public resources that grew out of those partnerships.
The HOPE framework adds insights to the prevention and treatment of child abuse and neglect, and this link was celebrated last month at a national convening of EndCAN.
August is Family Fun Month, and the HOPE National Resource Center is all about families creating positive childhood experiences (PCEs) by having fun together!
The HOPE National Resource Center has created a whiteboard video sharing how healthy eating and physical activity can support access to the Four Building Blocks of HOPE.
This blog shares an example of a strengths-based way to apply the HOPE framework to a common life event—birthdays.