Raising Children Network

The Raising Children Network is funded by the Government of Australia to produce and maintain educational tools and resources for families raising children in Australia.

The Raising Children website, which was launched in May 2006, has become the most trusted resource for parenting information in Australia, according to industry sources. It is a comprehensive and quality assured website covering all core information required for raising children from birth to eight years.[1] Each article on the Raising Children website is reviewed by two independent experts, drawn from a panel of over 100 subject matter experts — effective peer review.

In the first three years of operation the website registered over 10 million page views.

As a companion to the Raising Children website and to extend its reach, the Raising Children DVD was produced in 2007.

In November 2007, Australia became the first country in the world to initiate a universal parenting education program when it started distributing the companion Raising Children DVD to every family in the country, at the birth of their child in the hospital.[2] Over 250,000 are distributed each year.

The Raising Children DVD contains five hours of content — divided into three short movies, Newborn, Baby and Child and a section called ‘What About Me?’ It takes advantage of basic DVD technology to provide users with a fully interactive experience which enables them to opt into extended content topics and demonstration clips while watching the main movies.

Its effectiveness, according to the Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER) independent evaluation, is due to a combination of factors including: the high quality of production, the primary use of documentary style parent interviews, a comedic host and the inclusion of visual demonstrations of key skills, like breastfeeding and safe bathing.[3]

In 2007 the Raising Children website and DVD swept the relevant interactive media awards in Australia.[4] The Raising Children DVD won the Australian Interactive Media Association (AIMIA) award for the Best Learning & Education category. The expert judges commented that the DVD is,

in essence an interactive documentary for parents & carers, allowing them to explore and engage with information about parenting that enables the active construction of knowledge.

The Raising Children website won the AIMIA award for the Best Non-profit & Government category with judges commending the site’s innovative features:

The pop-up glossary terms are a fantastic solution to get information quickly and effectively to the user without sending them to a whole different page, and Make a Book is an invaluable function for tired parents to be able to refer back to without logging on.

The Raising Children website also won the NetGuide Australian Web Awards Best Parenting Website and took home their highest honour, 2007 Site of the Year as well. According to NetGuide, RCN “takes a huge topic — parenting — and presents masses of useful and reliable information in a well-designed site that’s a delight to visit”.

Three non profit organisations form the consortium behind the Raising Children Network and are responsible for its projects:

· The Parenting Research Centre, responsible for content development & quality assurance;
· Smart Population Foundation, responsible for design, web development, content optimisation & communications;
· The Murdoch Children’s Research Institute’s Centre for Community Child Health at the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne responsible for project and stakeholder management, and evaluation.

In 2009, the Australian Government announced funding for the Raising Children website to extend the parenting content to include parenting adolescents and teenagers to 16 years of age, which will be available in 2010.

References

  1. Yvette Nielsen (2007-12-03). "How the web can help create a better you". The Sydney Morning Herald (smh.com.au). Retrieved 2009-07-30.
  2. Stephanie Peatling (2007-08-21). "You spent the bonus, now here's the DVD". The Sydney Morning Herald (smh.com.au). Retrieved 2009-07-30.
  3. AAP (2007-08-20). "New parents to get DVD help". Brisbane Times (brisbanetimes.com.au). Retrieved 2009-07-30.
  4. Simon Canning (2008-03-13). "Unlikely innovators bag interactive awards". The Australian (theaustralian.news.com.au). Retrieved 2009-07-30.

External links

Anxiety in Children - ABC

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.