Child Protection Training – Press Release

Kidpower Offers Summer Child Protection Skills and Leadership Training

San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) May 14, 2013

Kidpower, an internationally respected child safety advocacy and protection skills education nonprofit, launches its premiere summer institute this August in San Francisco to prepare educators and other professionals, volunteers, and parents with child safety advocacy and leadership skills to protect children from abuse, abduction and bullying within their schools, organizations, youth programs, communities and families.

“So often in the news, we see how the trap of what I call ‘The Illusion of Safety’ and the lack of a few key personal safety skills have led to such terrible suffering,” says Irene van der Zande, Kidpower founder and executive director, prolific author and the lead trainer for Kidpower’s Skills for Child Protection professional 3-day training in San Francisco, August 9 – 11, 2013.

“What if young people truly knew how to resist being tricked into accepting a ride, had the skills and confidence to intervene or speak up in the moment to stop bullying and abuse, and how to get help from busy adults? When the adults in leadership positions know how to protect children, then they can also empower them to take charge of their own safety.”

The Kidpower Skills for Child Protection summer training reveals key concepts based on Kidpower’s 24 years of experience in developing and teaching “People Safety” to children, teens, adults, parents, teachers, other professionals, and its own instructors. “People safety skills help people be safe with people at home, at school, online, out in the world… everywhere. They also help strengthen important relationships,” says van der Zande.

Limited space is available. Details and registration information for the Skills for Child Protection training in August are available on Kidpower’s website:

https://www.kidpower.org/what-we-do/skills-for-child-protection/

“Kidpower has an outstanding track record of teaching parents and other caring adults effective skills without creating fear,” says Manny Solano, Chief of Police, Watsonville City Police Department. “As a public safety officer, I strongly believe that a great deal of violence, including bullying and abuse, could be prevented if everyone had these skills.”

About Kidpower:

Kidpower is a non-profit leader in personal safety and confidence-building skills education, whose programs are highly recommended by experts worldwide for taking a positive, skills-based approach to preventing abuse, kidnapping, bullying and other violence. Kidpower workshops, K-12 safety curriculum, books, videos, and the Kidpower.org free resource library have helped to protect more than 2.5 million people, including those with special needs, from abuse, bullying and other violence since 1989. Kidpower’s founder and executive director, Irene van der Zande, has been featured as a personal safety expert by USA Today, CNN, and The Wall Street Journal. She is the author of The Kidpower Book for Caring Adults, a comprehensive guide for understanding personal safety, self-protection, confidence, and advocacy for young people; Bullying: What adults need to know and do to keep kids safe; and the Kidpower Safety Comic Series, which many schools use in their child abuse and violence prevention training programs.

Media contact: Email “media (at) kidpower (dot) org” for more information or to request an interview.