Assisting Kansas' parents and their sons and daughters with disabilities for more than 25 years!

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Other Resources
  • Challenges Facing Parents With Developmental Disabilities - Life experiences of parents with developmental disabilities may take their toll over time, especially if others have negatively valued the parents. Over time, parents may have internalized these negative expectations. (Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader Download Adobe Acrobat Reader)

  • Disability Cool: Parents With Disabilities -Is it cool to be disabled? ... we think so. Through this web site, we plan to challenge all the preconceived notions about what it's like to live with a disability... the good parts and the bad parts. When we've finished with you, we hope you will never again accept society's stereotypes and low levels of expectations of what people think we should be.

  • Disabled Parents Network (DPN) - Disabled Parents Network (DPN) is a national organization of and for disabled people who are parents or who hope to become parents, and their families, friends and supporters.

  • Helping Yourself Through Family Court Proceedings:
    A Guide for Parents with Psychiatric Disabilities
    - The following are suggestions from parents with psychiatric disabilities, service providers, and representatives of Family Courts on how you can help yourself and your children during any Family Court proceedings involving custody. They are not intended as legal counsel, but may serve to help you to understand the process of Family Court and what steps you can take to best care for yourself and your children.

  • Parents with Disabilities Online - For too long, people with disabilities had been told that having families of our own was not an option. The truth is, though, that we have always been parents, and as our society evolves, more and more of us will have access to that opportunity. If you are a parent with a disability, a person with a disability who is planning to become a parent, or a nondisabled partner of a disabled parent, this site is for you. We hope that this page is a good place to start on your own journey toward independent parenting.

  • Parents with Disabilities a Resource Center

  • Parents With Developmental Disabilities: A Fair Chance - "A Fair Chance" hears from six families with parents with developmental disabilities who talk frankly about their hopes and fears as parents. Organized into six segments, each about eight minutes in length, this program profiles the strengths and limitations of six parents who have developmental disabilities. These challenging stories lead one to ask "are parents being given a fair chance to raise their own children?"

  • Parents with Disabilities and Their Teens

  • Providing Support to Parents who have Developmental Disabilities - When looking for information about best practices in supporting parents with developmental disabilities, one is immediately struck by the lack of information available. Much of the information on parenting and disability focuses on physical disability, with supports being framed in terms of physical environmental modifications that make the day to day aspects of parenting doable. But the notion that people with cognitive disabilities also are parents comes as a shock to some people. This outdated idea has been made part of policies and procedures in some agencies: people with cognitive disabilities are at increased risk of having their children removed from them simply due to misguided perceptions that people with cognitive disabilities can’t be adequate parents

  • Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) & Teen Parents with Disabilities - The purpose of this guide is to show how States may use Federal TANF and State MOE funds to support working families and to address the needs of clients with barriers to self-sufficiency. The flexibility available under TANF presents new opportunities for funding a greater variety of activities, services, and benefits and for fostering new collaborative partnerships.

  • Through the Looking Glass - Through the Looking Glass (TLG) is a nationally recognized center that has pioneered research, training, and services for families in which a child, parent or grandparent has a disability or medical issue. TLG is a disability community based nonprofit organization, which emerged from the independent living movement, and was founded in 1982 in Berkeley, California. Our mission is "To create, demonstrate and encourage non-pathological and empowering resources and model early intervention services for families with disability issues in parent or child which integrate expertise derived from personal disability experience and disability culture."

  • When a Parent has MS: A Teenagers Guide - This booklet explores the experiences of some people whose parents have MS. Some are teenagers and some are young adults who remember what it was like. Their problems range from minor annoyances, like having to be extra careful not to leave things on the floor, to deeper emotions of anger, embarrassment, and guilt. They agreed to share their stories and suggest some ways of dealing with what happens when a parent (or someone else at home) has MS.

  • When Mom or Dad has Seizures: A Guide for Young People - Epilepsy Foundation. Designed as a companion guide to "Parenting and You," this guide discusses children's feelings about their parent's disorder. It is divided into sections for preschool, elementary, middle, and high school-aged children

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