| Project Kidz Talk©
CCAN’s Project Kidz Talk © is a peer support
and socialization group for child victims of abuse and their non-offending
family members.
PATCHES Parents And Their Children Helping Each other Survive,
is an off-shoot of Project Kidz Talk ©.
Developed through CCAN’s Child Victim
Advocate Program in 1997, the program provides a safe environment
for children to share their thoughts and fears, empowering child
victims of sexual abuse to lessen their feelings of isolation and
increase their self-esteem while recovering their childhood.
Children are organized into age appropriate groups (under the age
of 8, 8 to 10, and 11 to 13) with groups always changing and expanding
to fit the needs of the children who attend. They meet once a week,
along with non-offending parents for a family-style dinner, followed
by work on specific projects. There are also occasional family outings
as a group.
Project Kidz Talk © offers a structured setting that allows the children’s
creativity to be fully expressed. The children feel better knowing
they are not alone in their experiences and also often feel that
they had “advice” to share with other kids. In effect,
they are the experts. So often these children feel like they are
the only one who has ever been abused or that they were doubted
by the very systems that are supposed to protect them. The children
have to endure seemingly endless questioning, medical exams and
feelings of isolation. They also share how scary it was to see a
courtroom, a judge and court officers.
Project Kidz Talk © began when children and their parents were recruited
through the Child Victim Advocate Program
to create a coloring book explaining the court process to a child.
While working with a particularly difficult case that required a
child to testify in both Family Court and Criminal Court, CCAN staff
researched published books for children who had to go to court.
Although there were many such books, none spoke to the child from
his or her point of view. Child advocates could explain what would
happen next, but could not speak to the child with the same understanding
that another child with similar experiences could. A resource was
needed to explain the process to a child through the eyes of a child
who had already been through the process.
While the children worked on this project, the non-offending
parents met to talk and share. The finished coloring book has
won wide acclaim in the therapeutic community and the Project Kidz
Talk © process has proved to be a positive tool in empowering victims
and their family members to continue the recovery of their lives.
Subsequent group projects have included anti-child abuse and child
victim rights messages on T-shirts, an annual calendar, mobiles
and, most recently, a magnificent 5’ X 7’ quilt.
Project Kidz Talk © has been replicated in Suffolk County, offering
its services through the William Floyd School District in Mastic.
Back to Programs & Services or Child
Advocacy Center pages.
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