An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | April 4, 2014

Defense Department honors kids during Military Child Month

By Terri Moon Cronk American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON - The Defense Department believes military children serve their country alongside their service member parents, DOD's director of the office of family policy/children and youth said.

When military children serve, they do so by making sacrifices when parents are deployed, through frequent moves, starting new schools and making new friends on a continuing basis, Barbara Thompson said in a recent interview with The Pentagon Channel for the Month of the Military Child that's being celebrated in April.

"We feel it's important for the nation to know that military children also serve their country," Thompson said.

To honor military children for their sacrifices and service, DOD and the services have planned activities this month that range from installation-based fairs, parades, and literacy and art events, she said.

Military Kids Day, April 15, marks the third-annual "Purple Up!" day when adults wear purple to show support of children from all the services, Thompson said.

DOD has numerous year-round programs and awareness efforts to honor military children, and Thompson elaborated on some of those initiatives.

To help children build their resilience, DOD has coordinated programs with Sesame Street to help with ongoing change in military children's lives, Thompson noted.

"Sesame [Street] has been an outstanding contributor to the well-being of military children," she said, naming a series of DVDs that cover such topics for military children as divorce, grief, separation and deployment, resilience skills, and visible or invisible injuries.

Sesame Street also recently launched two new smartphone applications.

"One [app] covers relocation, and another is to help children learn self-regulation skills so they become more resilient," Thompson said. "And everything is free."

Thompson emphasized that April also is Child Abuse Prevention Month and said awareness in this arena is important to DOD.

"Child Abuse Prevention Month is particularly important because it's a social responsibility for all of us to make sure children are safe and their well-being is protected," she said. "Everybody has a responsibility."

Giving parents the tools to make them strong supporters of their children and to keep them safe from predators and from violence within the family is crucial, she added.

"Parenting is tough, regardless of the situation and the age of the child. They each bring their nuances to the table, whether it's children at [age] 2 who say ‘no,' or a teenager who's sometimes a little defiant," she said.

DOD offers parenting skill resources, Thompson noted, such as the newly launched Parenting Course. The course, she explained, examines parenting from the context of the military lifestyle, which revolves around deployments and parental separations from their children at different stages of their development.

And an installation-based initiative, the new Parent Support Program, involves home visitation for new parents of children up to age 3, "to help parents reach their full potential working with and being responsible for their children," Thompson said. The Marine Corps' program supports parents with children up to age 5, she added.

"The New Parent Support Program is a part of the Family Advocacy Program, which has a prevention piece that offers courses and opportunities for support groups. We want to make sure we address the stressors in families' lives before they escalate," Thompson said.

"Sometimes [certain] things really push our buttons," she added. "So we need to have the tools, to know how to cope with those kinds of stressors and how we react to them."

Related Video

DoD Sees Child Safety as a "Social Responsibility"

 

 

Related Articles
Staff Sgt. Alexander Spradling, an instructor with the 1-117th Military Police Battalion’s Multifunction Company prepares to launch an RQ-28A, a small, unmanned aircraft during the Small Unmanned Aircraft System, or SUAS, Master Trainer pilot course at Tullahoma’s Volunteer Training Site, June 23, 2026. Unlike the Army’s basic operator course, the Master Trainer Course prepares experienced operators to certify future SUAS pilots, manage unit training programs and advise commanders on unmanned aircraft system employment. Facilitated by Tennessee’s 117th Regional Training Institute, this is the first course of its kind in the Army National Guard. Photo by 1st Lt. Bailey Breving.
Tennessee Guard Hosts First Drone Trainer Course
By Tennessee National Guard | July 2, 2026
SMYRNA, Tenn. – Twelve Tennessee Army National Guard Soldiers became the first graduates of Tennessee’s new Small Unmanned Aircraft System, or SUAS, Master Trainer course led by the 1-117th Military Police Battalion at...

Airmen assigned to the 120th Airlift Wing, Montana Air National Guard, participate in Operation War Hog Breakout during a Combat Readiness Inspection in Great Falls and Helena, Montana, 2026. The four-day inspection evaluated the wing's ability to survive, operate and accomplish mission-essential tasks in a simulated deployed environment while preparing Airmen for future federal and state missions. Photo by Tech. Sgt. Nicholas Reid.
Montana Guard Completes Combat Readiness Inspection
By Senior Master Sgt. Devin Doskey, | July 2, 2026
GREAT FALLS, Mont. – Airmen assigned to the 120th Airlift Wing, Montana Air National Guard, concluded Operation War Hog Breakout, a four-day Combat Readiness Inspection that evaluated the wing's ability to execute...

The West Virginia Army National Guard Fixed Wing Army Aviation Training Site receives the 2025 Lt. Gen. Allen M. Burdett Jr. Army Aviation Flight Safety Award during an award ceremony on June 29, 2026. The award, sponsored by the Order of Daedalians, is presented annually to the Army aviation training unit deemed to have the most effective aircraft accident prevention program. Photo by Maj. Cibeles Ramirez-Rodriguez.
Army National Guard Wins National Aviation Safety Award
By Maj. Cibeles Ramirez-Rodriguez, | July 2, 2026
BRIDGEPORT, W.Va. – The Army National Guard’s Fixed Wing Army Aviation Training Site, or FWAATS, operated by the West Virginia Army National Guard, received the 2025 Lt. Gen. Allen M. Burdett Jr. Army Aviation Flight Safety...