HOPE translates popular resources in Mandarin and Vietnamese
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.
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.
HOPE National Resource Center Director, Bob Sege, went to Darwin Australia at the end of September. Here is part two of his time there.
HOPE National Resource Center Director, Bob Sege, went to Darwin Australia two weeks ago. Below is his firsthand experience and impression of how international foster care organizations are practicing the HOPE framework.
Read our interview with Elliott Hinkle, member of the HOPE National Advisory Board and the HOPE Family and Community Experts Council. “HOPE is like, when someone brings you a problem and you want them to also bring a solution. How are we thinking differently about the work and moving beyond what is bad and what is hard to how we are going to make any change here. It has given me, funnily enough, hope in the work.”
This summer, four interns from Boston public high schools have joined the HOPE National Resource Center team!
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.
The HOPE National Resource Center started a Train the Facilitator program, and almost one year into the program we will have over 100 certified facilitators!
On April 20th at 4 p.m. ET, HOPE will host its second free HOPEful Connections networking event on the website.
Featured in a podcast, Robert Sege, MD, PhD talks about how positive childhood experiences (PCEs) play a critical role in a child’s life.
Today, we are talking to Jennifer Jones, Chief Strategy Officer at Prevent Child Abuse America. Here, she shares why prevention is important for the well-being of children and families and how HOPE supports that work.