America Supports You - Troops
and Families Get Secure Connection
Since 05-06-06
From: Waspscpo@aol.com
Sent: Thursday, April 27, 2006 6:19 PM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: America Supports You: Troops, Families Get Secure Connection
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Apr2006/20060427_4950.html
America Supports You: Troops, Families Get Secure Connection
By Paul X. Rutz
American Forces Press Service
April 27, 2006
WASHINGTON, April 27, 2006 – Military families will soon have a new and secure
way to keep in touch with their deployed loved ones.
America Supports You: Linda Dennis, founder and president of "Connect and
Join," and Dr. Frederic Medway, are launching a Web site for military families.
Here, they pose April 25 in the Pentagon with arts and crafts projects they
developed to help military families stay in touch during deployment.
"Connect and Join," an Internet-based communications company, provides a forum
for military families to keep in touch when their loved ones deploy, said the
company's founder and president, Linda Dennis, during an interview at the
Pentagon April 25. The multidimensional Web site goes live at the end of this
month. Dennis said the Web forum would be available to military families for $5
per month, half the normal charge.
"We have taken together all of the important elements of life at home and
combined them in one portal," she said. "You have your photographs that capture
the memories; you have your writing, your journaling, that brings forward the
word. Then you have a calendar system that brings forward the little tiny
moments that sometimes you forget to say on the telephone or in a letter or an
e-mail."
The site also includes suggestions for projects families can make at home and
send via the post office, as well as an archival tool for making scrapbooks to
keep once servicemembers have returned home.
A former Air Force wife with a background in child education, Dennis said she
was inspired to develop the portal after hearing a speech by a National Guard
colonel who had deployed to Kosovo in the 1990s. He showed his audience photos
of soldiers standing in long lines waiting to check e-mail, noting that often
they couldn't download attachments their families had sent.
That sparked the idea to create an easy-to-use communications tool that didn't
force its users to download large amounts of data and could be viewed any time.
Dennis said her staff of 19 educators has worked 18 months to develop the site,
in partnership with University of South Carolina technical experts and
psychologists.
They began by talking with focus groups, mostly military spouses, who built
their own family sites using prototype software. An important part of the
development included creating software that is simple to use and requires no
formal training.
"Kids today are fearless," she said. "They get on and hit the mouse, and they
go. But we had in the room 60-year-old women ... who had never used a computer.
... For Connect and Join to be successful beyond an idea, we had to be sure we
could train them."
Along with ease of use, the project's major goal is security, Dennis said. Each
registration is limited to five users: the family editor, the deployed
servicemember, and three other members. Nothing can be posted for public
viewing, and each site is unique to the family creating it. "It's all private,
password protected," she said.
"It's just between the deployed soldier and the family members. And the family
editor is really the key because the family editor controls all the content." As
an added safeguard, the company has put filters in place to screen out unseemly
content, which keep the portal family friendly, she said. Dr. Frederic Medway, a
psychology professor at the University of South Carolina, said his research on
family separation issues shows several reasons why better communication leads to
healthier families.
He has joined the project as evaluation director, working with Connect and Join
on two aspects of development. First, Medway said, he wants "to make sure that
the product itself is psychologically friendly, it ties into the different
developmental needs that children have or families have, and that it reflects
what we know in terms of best practice about military family research."
Second, he said, he wants to use the site to gather data on how families behave
while a loved one is deployed, using what he learns to help families even more.
"We're using the information to continually make the product better," he said.
He hopes the site will help answer questions psychologists still have about the
effect long-term separation has on families. Medway said psychologists already
know a lot about how to help families better cope with separation.
Families fare better when they are well-informed; live in communities with good
support; have help from local schools and other institutions; and use available
mental health services to help them deal with anxiety, depression or
post-traumatic stress disorder, he said. Homecoming can also be a difficult
adjustment period, he said. Communication about small and big things helps make
that transition easier.
"We know from many, many years of research that oftentimes military personnel
come back home and they feel like things have really changed a lot," Medway
said. "Hopefully one promise of Connect and Join is it will bridge that gap and
make the soldier feel more a part of the family and have more input."
Dennis said the project has seen a lot of media attention recently, including
news articles and invitations to appear on talk shows. She believes that only
helps military families. She said her company also recently joined America
Supports You, a Defense Department program that highlights grassroots and
corporate support for the nation's troops. "We are all about giving support to
the families, and ultimately that supports the troops," she said.
Related Sites:
Connect and Join
America Supports You
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)