APU Graduate Students Connect with Domestic Violence Survivors
Family coaches focus on serving domestic violence survivors whose children are at imminent risk of foster care entry as well as families hardest hit by COVID-19. Using BFFI’s prevention and intervention coaching model, the family coaches strengthen families by creating a safety net which includes providing parenting skills, factual information, helping to develop social support system, and helping families navigate to improve access to health, education and natural communities of support. Coaches work with families and their children on a one-to-one basis in environments that are culturally and linguistically responsive. BFFI is honored to feature the following family coaches from Azusa Pacific University:
The family coaches are first- and second-year graduate students enrolled in the Master of Science Counseling Psychology program at Azusa Pacific University’s School of Behavioral and Applied Science. Under the supervision of Dr. Danielle Lascano, the focus of the BFFI’s training as well as their research/academic studies is: 1) to determine the connection between domestic violence and foster care; 2) determine how to prevent more battered women and their children from becoming involved in foster care; 3) assessing the domestic violence family dynamics through the lens of the children; 4) determine the extent of trauma experienced when children are exposed to violence against one of their parents. The overall goal is to decrease child maltreatment.
“It is this next generation that will learn to create safe relationships and environments to break the cycle of domestic violence that will lead to empowering parents to make decisions that will create safe, stable, nurturing and healing relationships and environments."