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268 days ago

Seasons for Growth - Volunteer Companions

Wendy Richards from Volunteering New Plymouth

Seasons for growth is a well-researched and respected early intervention education programme used in support of 6-18 year olds who have experienced a loss or major change in their family through death, parental separation or divorce, migration, imprisonment, fostering, relationship break-down or any similar significant change.

It was written by Anne Graham, an Australian professor of Childhood Studies at Southern Cross University, NSW in 1996 and has been implemented in New Zealand since then. Since its beginning the programme has supported over 300,000 children and adolescents in New Zealand, Australia, Singapore, Scotland, Ireland, England and Wales.

It is based on the belief that change and loss are part of life and grief is a normal response to these losses.

It is also based on the Tasks of Grieving model of William Worden and it uses the metaphor of the natural seasons as a vivid, symbolic and familiar framework for connecting and experiences of grief.

The programme runs over 8 one-hour weekly sessions. Pre-arranged small groups of similarly aged children or young people meet together for these 8 sessions. They are facilitated by screened, police- vetted and trained volunteers, known in the programme as “Companions”. These groups are mainly run in schools and usually during school hours, but sometimes after school. Many schools in Taranaki are familiar with this work and request to have the groups running for their students on a regular basis. The programme involves activities and discussion on topics including change, feelings, personal stories and self-care.

Groups run throughout Taranaki during each school term and each year there are 150 -200 youngsters participating in a group somewhere in the province.

There is currently a recruitment drive for volunteers to train as Companions for 2024

Important personal attributes include:
• Enjoy and care about children and young people, being fully committed to their safety
• Good listener and adaptable
• Be a team player, comfortable in group work and willing to learn
• Have some experience of change, loss and grief
• Have 2 hours a week for each 8-week program you facilitate.
• Have independent transport
• Police vetting requirement

Companion training for the Children’s and Young People’s Programme is being planned to run over two days on Friday 22nd and Saturday 23rd March, in New Plymouth and there is an application process required prior to this.

Ongoing support and training for Companions is an integral part of this programme.

There is also training available for people interested in facilitating the Adult and Parent programmes as well as the LTI Programme for 5 – 18-year-olds living with loved ones who have serious illness.

If you are curious to learn more about any of the programmes and / or you are interested in becoming a Companion, please contact Wendy at Volunteering New Plymouth on 06 758 8986, Email: admin@vnp.nz or Ph / Text 022 571 4228 to take the next step.

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More messages from your neighbours
4 days ago

Live Q&A: Garden maintenance with Crewcut

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

This Wednesday, we are having another Neighbourly Q&A session. This time with John Bracewell from Crewcut.

John Bracewell, former Black Caps coach turned Franchisee Development Manager and currently the face of Crewcut’s #Movember campaign, knows a thing or two about keeping the grass looking sharp—whether it’s on a cricket pitch or in your backyard!

As a seasoned Crewcut franchisee, John is excited to answer your lawn and gardening questions. After years of perfecting the greens on the field, he's ready to share tips on how to knock your garden out of the park. Let's just say he’s as passionate about lush lawns as he is about a good game of cricket!

John is happy to answer questions about lawn mowing, tree/hedge trimming, tidying your garden, ride on mowing, you name it! He'll be online on Wednesday, 27th of November to answer them all.

Share your question below now ⬇️

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8 hours ago

Calling All Puzzle Masters! Can You Solve This?

Riddler from The Neighbourly Riddler

When John was six years old he hammered a nail into his favorite tree to mark his height.
Ten years later at age sixteen, John returned to see how much higher the nail was.
If the tree grew by five centimetres each year, how much higher would the nail be?

Do you think you know the answer to our daily riddle? Don't spoil it for your neighbours! Simply 'Like' this post and we'll post the answer in the comments below at 2pm.

Want to stop seeing riddles in your newsfeed?
Head here and hover on the Following button on the top right of the page (and it will show Unfollow) and then click it. If it is giving you the option to Follow, then you've successfully unfollowed the Riddles page.

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8 hours ago

Win this brand new home!

Heart Foundation Lottery

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Whether you decide to make it your dream home, a holiday retreat, a rental property or simply sell it, it’s still a life-changing prize.

Don’t wait—get your tickets today at heartlottery.org.nz.
Find out more

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