Family Impact Seminar for Wisconsin Policymakers Focuses on Early Childhood

by | February 5, 2014

Home 9 Early Care and Education 9 Family Impact Seminar for Wisconsin Policymakers Focuses on Early Childhood ( Page 8 )

Three experts presented research on brain development and the return on early investment to a packed room of legislators, aides, policymakers, and state staff. The event was the 32nd Wisconsin Family Impact Seminar on January 22, 2014 in the Capitol.

Art Rolnick, former Senior Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, talked about the remarkable return on investment from early childhood development programs.

Pat Levitt, a distinguished professor of neuroscience, psychiatry, and pharmacy at the University of Southern California, discussed toxic stress in young children and its impact on the brain, early learning and health.

Dave Riley (filling in for Katherine Magnuson), professor of human ecology at UW and an early childhood education specialist, talked about programs that work in Wisconsin.

All three experts strongly agreed that what happens in the first five years has extraordinary impact of a child’s learning and development.

To learn more details, go to: family impact seminar

Dave Edie

Kids Forward
Kids Forward

Join us to build a Wisconsin where every child and family thrives.

Recent

Explained: End Juvenile Life Without Parole in Wisconsin

Explained: End Juvenile Life Without Parole in Wisconsin

Wisconsin relies far too much on incarceration and blames children for system-wide failures. Instead of incarceration, a better investment for Wisconsin’s youth is in basic needs such as health, housing, and employment.  Wisconsin should reimagine a community-based continuum of care grounded in youth voice, emerging adult research, and cross-system collaboration. 

Testimony: End Juvenile Life Without Parole in Wisconsin

Testimony: End Juvenile Life Without Parole in Wisconsin

Kids Forward supports SB801/AB845, which would eliminate juvenile life without parole. This critical advancement towards a more developmentally appropriate juvenile justice system will reduce and repair harm, decrease racial disparities, increase child and family wellbeing, and increase opportunities for community-based alternatives to incarceration. 

Sign up for Emails

Your address helps us identify your legislators and the most relevant messages to send you.