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filler@godaddy.com
Signed in as:
filler@godaddy.com
Parenting skills education plays a vital role in strengthening families and improving outcomes for children. By supporting parents with practical knowledge and strategies, organisations can help create healthier, more resilient communities. Through cost-effective and preventative approaches, our services support schools, local authorities, and community organisations in promoting family wellbeing, improving child development, and reducing long-term pressure on public services.


We provide strategic consultation to schools, local authorities, and organisations seeking to strengthen family wellbeing through effective parenting support.
Our consultancy helps organisations identify practical, evidence-informed approaches to parenting skills education that deliver meaningful community impact. By investing in early and preventative interventions, organisations can improve outcomes for children and families while reducing long-term pressure on public services.

Our workshops equip professionals with the knowledge and practical tools needed to support parents and strengthen family relationships.
Designed for educators, community practitioners, and family support staff, these sessions explore effective approaches to parenting education and highlight how simple, low-cost interventions can contribute to healthier families and more resilient communities.

We deliver informative and engaging talks for schools, local authorities, and community organisations on the role of parenting support in improving social and educational outcomes.
Topics include the wider impact of parenting education on child development, family wellbeing, and community stability. These sessions highlight how strengthening parenting skills can lead to improved child welfare, better educational outcomes, and stronger community cohesion.

We work in partnership with organisations to develop and implement sustainable parenting support initiatives.
Our approach focuses on strengthening community capacity, supporting families, and improving long-term outcomes for children. By embedding effective parenting support within services, organisations can create lasting benefits for families while contributing to healthier, more connected communities.
- A parenting skills workshop attendee
“I found today very empowering. It was really nice to meet fellow parents and share the positives and negatives of parenthood.”
“… Recovering from postnatal depression/panic/anxiety… the opportunity to have very simple accessible resources to slow down and reflect was another tool to use for me and my child.”
“It was a great session where we learned different tips to make reading time more fun with our kids.”

Maria was struggling with her child, Sami. She could not enforce rules, boundaries or routines and struggled with the cultural differences of raising Sami compared to her upbringing. Sami was not behaving well; he would not listen, could not manage his emotions, would not take responsibility for his actions, and could not comply with instructions or follow routines.
We taught Maria some strategies such as praising, planning to ignore and modelling. We gave her homework to practice.
Maria found, within a few days and weeks, that praising and paying attention to Sami’s good behaviour brought positive results. She could see that modelling the behaviour she wanted from Sami was effective and that he copied her. She learnt to have positive conversations with him, which balanced the instructional conversations she mostly used in the past.
Maria and Sami learned to make rules together, which helped Sami to take ownership of his behaviour. Maria managed to make routines stick and learned to be authoritative while listening to Sami and allowing him to self-express and feel heard.
“Growing up in a different time period and being from an African background, my perspective is different from the new culture. I never acknowledged that my child faces different challenges. I've learned to listen and create practical steps to help them face challenges in their environment." - Maria
To continue supporting Maria, we signposted her to a parent community where she could continue to feel part of a peer support network.
(Names have been changed.)