Want help with child-rearing? Contact a Parent Place
THE Early Childhood Commission (ECC) is urging parents to utilise services provided at its 73 Parenting Places, to ensure that they can manage demanding situations in child-rearing.
Making the call at a recent mental health forum for parents and students held at Paul Mountain Primary School in St Catherine, community relations manager at the commission Tanisha Miller said once parents become anxious and stressed, they should go to a Parent Place, where they will be helped, along with their children.
“When you are not sure how to deal with your little ones (children) at home, when they are giving a lot of talking, and you think that they are just rude and disobedient, get the help,” she said.
Miller said that no parent will be turned away from a Parent Place, and the children will be stimulated “while you are being counselled”.
Miller told the forum that the ECC also operates 132 Brain Builder Centres, which have nurses and daycare centres, and the services are free to parents.
“Meals are provided, trained teachers are there, and caregivers are there for you,” she said.
The ECC is an agency of the Ministry of Education and Youth and has comprehensive programmes designed to meet the language, physical, cognitive, creative, socio-emotional, spiritual, cultural, and school-readiness needs of children.
It was established by the Early Childhood Commission Act (2003), in keeping with the strategic goal of the Government of Jamaica to improve the quality of early childhood care, education and development within the early childhood sector.
The full listing of Parent Places can be seen at ecc.gov.jm/parent-places-listing/, and there are 15 in Kingston and St Andrew; four in St Thomas; four in Portland; five in St Mary; three in St Ann; four in Trelawny; six in St James; three in Hanover; four in Westmoreland; seven in St Elizabeth; five in Manchester; five in St Catherine; and eight in Clarendon.