By Amaani Lyle
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, April 1, 2015 – To highlight the year-round
contributions, courage and patriotism of the military community’s youngest
members, the Defense Department observes April as the Month of the Military
Child, a Pentagon official told DoD News.
Established by then-Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger in
1986, the month recognizes some 1.9 million U.S. military children ranging in
age from infants to 18 years old who have one or both parents serving in the
armed forces, said Barbara Thompson, the director of DoD’s Office of Family
Readiness Policy.
“We want to highlight their sacrifices [and] support of the
military member in their families, so it behooves us to take time from the busy
calendar of our events and recognize military children,” she said.
Permanent-change-of-station moves, deployments and training
activities, among other facets of military life, can present unique challenges
to children who must constantly adjust to distance, unfamiliarity and uncertain
schedules, Thompson explained.
“That can be a real sacrifice, because each parent is a very
important part of that child’s makeup,” she said. “So we want to make sure that
when they move or change schools, all of those transition times are supported
with resources, programs and services.”
DoD offers a variety of programs to help military children
overcome these challenges, Thompson said.
Available Programs Offer Assistance
For example, the Child Development Program offers child care
up to age 12. Similarly, youth development programs offer older children
opportunities for recreation, and character, social and emotional development.
Thompson reported that parents, too, have resources to help
best guide and nurture their children of all ages.
The New Parents Support Program helps parents during
pregnancy and childbirth, and children up to 3 years of age, to reach their
full potential through home visitations and parent support groups, she said.
Military OneSource is another resource available 24/7, 365
days a year, to support parents to learn more about parenting skills, as well
as to find support for themselves, Thompson added. It also offers telephonic,
face-to-face, online and video nonmedical and financial counseling, which she
described as “strengthening pillars” for military households separated from
extended family or settling into a new environment.
“On the installations, we have military family support
centers,” she said, “where a multitude of services for transitions and life
skills are offered to make sure our families can be resilient and strengthen
them in their efforts to be the parents they want to be.”
Family support has evolved over the last 40 years to become
the family readiness system, which is a collaborative network of agencies,
programs, services and professionals who promote the readiness and quality of
life of military families both on installations and in the community, Thompson
said.
“There is no ‘wrong’ door,” she said. “So regardless of
where you’re seeking support, whether it’s with your pediatrician or with your
chaplain, he or she will also know the resources to support you in your efforts
to navigate the military life course.”
A Visual Tribute
Across the services, Thompson said, parades, fairs, art and
poetry contests will abound as installations develop engaging and amusing
activities to solidify the bonds among families and communities.
“We want to make sure that children’s voices are heard
during the Month of the Military Child,” she said. “It’s a fun time to be with
their families [and] to take part in the various activities that the services
developed to recognize military children.”
Community outreach initiatives include partnerships with the
Department of Agriculture and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture’s
4-H youth group to promote “Purple Up!” On April 15, Thompson said. Students,
school sports team members, teachers and community leaders will wear purple as
a visual tribute to military children.
“It is hard to be a military child, and they’re doing it
super well,” Thompson said.
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