Our Transition - the brief version:
That Anna! Always hammin' it up! |
What is Cookson Hills Christian Ministries?
The mission of CHCM is "Providing Christ-centnered residential care, education, and therapeutic services for at-risk children ages 5-17." As a non-denominational ministry with roots in the Christian Church and Churches of Christ, CHCM has a bible-based statement of beliefs that fit our faith heritage - you can find their statement of beliefs here HERE. CHCM's strategy for meeting the needs of children include:
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Brand new school opened January 2014 |
- Family-style living - kids live with houseparents and other male and female children in each home (up to 10 kids include houseparents' kids). Houseparents serve as surrogate parents.
- Educational services - Cookson has a year-round private Christian school 1st-12th grade that is accredited. Currently serving a little over 100 children, education is provided to staff and placed children. Hey, we even have sports teams...right now girls volleyball and boys/girls basketball!
- Therapeutic services - Cookson contracts with Christian, professional counselors who assist children individually, in groups, and even family counseling. In our opinion, an advantage of Cookson, compared to other children's homes, is that children here receive counseling during the school day - houseparents do not have to drive kids to and from counseling sessions. Additional therapeutic services include equine-assisted therapy - go horses!
- Recreation - Yes! When looking for HP jobs, Rachel and I were hoping to find an active community with a location conducive to outdoor activities. Children have frequent access to a playground, basketball court, and other outdoor play activities. Cookson organizes recreational activities throughout the year, particularly during the 5-week summer break and during the Spring school semester. Staff lend their expertise and share their hobbies with students through activities such as horseback riding, roping, rocket-building, scrapbooking, drama, hunter safety, disc golf, and much more. Think anyone would accept my relationships course material as "recreation"...
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What we do as houseparents (HP)?
We're brand new at this. We added our first child last Tuesday, so we haven't experienced much. Simply put – we do what parents do for up to 10 children at
a time (including our own 3). Kids are expected to be respectful, learn from
their mistakes, and work on their goals as set by their social worker. Soooo we
work to hold our kids accountable, give them opportunities to grow, and have
plenty of fun too! Cookson also provides opportunities for work through the
summer work program as well as odds and ends throughout the year. Last Sunday
we unloaded the walls for one of the new houses!
As parents we also:
- Hold kids accountable for their choices and behavior
- Give opportunities for the development of faith through daily devotionals
- Check on their goals progress
- Show empathy especially when kids are stressed or emotionally not well
- Work through disagreements while modeling helpful conflict management
- Help them “find pleasure in the right ways” – as my dad likes to say
- Grow a work ethic in school, home, and campus projects
- Teach/model life skills, friendship, relationships
- Establish a family identity and plan fun events
- and more...
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Who are the kids who come to Cookson?
For as many kids there are as many stories. You can probably
think of many possible scenarios for why a child is placed here, and I’m sure
Cookson children have had such experiences. One thing is for sure - something
has happened or has been going on in their life which is challenging enough to
have them be placed under the ministry’s care. Sometimes it is a difficult and
harmful family situation, sometimes more closely related to the child’s
behavioral responses to past trauma. For instance, a number of children here
are from adoptive families, many with past trauma in childhood whose teen behaviors
have become difficult to manage as they – the kids - try to cope with past
experiences, fear, stress, difficulties with trust, developmental transitions
and so on. Some children have had many different caregivers throughout their
lives, perhaps in stable and loving environments or without the stability to be
cared for with the opportunity to develop well. The hope for each child is that
reunification with the family/caregivers can be achieved. For most kids, the
plan of care includes family reunification, typically with a stay of 2 years or
more. However, a handful of kids are long-term and will live at Cookson likely through
their high school graduation. So, as a part of program services, families have
opportunities for family counseling and family training. (Shhh…given my
educational background I’ll admit I am hoping one day to work more closely with
the family training services).
Being privately funded, Cookson accepts only private
placements and has a rigorous screening process. While adhering to state
standards for a child care facility, Cookson does not have to take kids placed
by the state of Oklahoma Dept of Human Services. This matters because Cookson
can create criteria for placement that fit the goals and strengths of the
ministry team (houseparents, social workers, teachers, directors)…and can also
deny placement when circumstances would be beyond the level of care that
Cookson can provide. It is important to note that Cookson is a residential
child care facility, not a lock-down heavy disciplined-focused guarded unit – a
legal guardian can discharge their child at any time.
For more stories about our kids and Cookson Hills, read our latest publication of Long Letter Home HERE.
Thanks for reading! Let me know if you find any formatting or pic loading issues...Alan
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