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  • A series of reports looking at the ground-breaking work of the Prevention Research Center for the Promotion of Human Development at Penn State University, concluding with coverage of a lecture there given by Tom Dishion, founder of the Child and Family Center at the University of Oregon.

Penn State Prevention Research Center

How Penn State has written a strategy for effective intervention

22 Oct 2007
In the space of a single decade, Penn State’s Prevention Research Center’s approach to science–based community empowerment has put it in the vanguard of efforts to make a seamless connection between prevention science, policy and practice.

Putting brain science back on the streets of Los Angeles

24 Oct 2007
An Oregon University-designed holistic “Family Check up” speaks for the fruits of a career that connects understanding of the neural mechanisms inside the brain with deep insights into the ordinary clutter of family life.

Bringing prevention services home to the family

25 Oct 2007
Services are poor and money for them is short. The response, says Tom Dishion, has to be affordable, effective assessments and interventions provided in schools and other places where there is regular contact with children and families.

Listening Before Doing! A commentary on the Bennett Lecture:

26 Oct 2007
The Zen teacher Suzuki Roshi said that the only effective mind is a “beginners mind” — one that is always open to revision, one that is not too attached to its current view. It takes real discipline to keep our minds open in this way. This year’s Bennett Lecture provided us with an especially powerful demonstration of how rewarding such discipline can be.