Children with an incarcerated parent and their families are amongst the most vulnerable in our community, with statistics showing they are six times more likely to end up in prison themselves and 40% more likely to drop out of school.
SHINE for Kids is the only national charity to provide services to support children and young people from infancy to adulthood, aimed at reducing the likelihood of children transitioning into child protection and justice systems. SHINE’s targeted support and intervention helps to avoid family fragmentation and intergenerational offending.
The impact of COVID-19 has magnified the trauma, isolation and disadvantage children feel when a parent is in prison. Lockdowns and restrictions mean that in-person visits have not been possible, at times for months on end.
To directly address this additional trauma, the Charitable Foundation is supporting SHINE to deliver the Storytime in Wellington initiative.
Storytime is a 12-month, creative communication project that aims to re-connect 350 children aged 0-10 years through storytelling with their parent incarcerated in Wellington and Macquarie Correctional Centres in the Central West of NSW.
SHINE teaches parents about the importance of storytelling in developing and maintaining a strong bond between the child and parent, and also the child’s brain development. Incarcerated parents record a book reading, along with writing and decorating a story of their own. The recording and books are then given to the child to read at home, supported by SHINE for Kids family support workers.
SHINE for Kids Manager, Julianne Sanders, said Storytime has enabled a parental connection to be maintained.
“The stories we hear, of reading together with a recording or keeping a book close at night shows how important this connection with a parent is, regardless of circumstance,” Julianne said.
Manager of Services and Programs at Macquarie Correctional Centre, Katrina Taunton, said a focus on education and experience at Macquarie is aimed at reducing repeat and intergenerational offending.