Our Strategy

The Basics Mission is to help whole communities prepare young children for school and for life—to put them on track for achieving their full potential—to help develop their brains, find joy in life, and prepare for coping effectively with life’s inevitable challenges.

The Basics vision entails communities where family-friendly policies and practices are norms that infuse multiple sectors of an institutional ecosystem. Such an ecosystem engages with families intentionally and relentlessly to alleviate stress and relieve material hardship in support of vibrant caregiver-child relationships that include, among other resources, The Basics Principles.

In a Basics Community, The Basics Principles become daily routines for all types of families, including those isolated traditionally from the types of information and support that The Basics movement promotes.

In a Basics Community, inclusion begins at the child’s birth. Health and family support providers make new parents aware that The Basics Principles can help their child to thrive. They refer and connect new parents to welcoming sources of Basics-related information and support.

In a Basics Community, there is socio-ecological saturation. A local backbone coalition emerges to enlist and support organizations across multiple sectors to embrace The Basics movement. As a consequence, parents encounter The Basics at many places across their social ecology—at work, the library, in faith-based organizations, friends’ homes, medical offices…

I am thrilled to see The Basics come to Cincinnati! The first five years of a child’s life are the most important, and The Basics highlights the simple things parents can do with their children to promote healthy development.

Steph Webber, PsyD, MPH,

Ohio Act Early Ambassador, Associate Director/Training Director, Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental and related Disabilities (LEND) program




In a Basics Community, parents receive information, social reinforcement, and reminders — these are the three gears of The Basics caregiver experience.

Information

In a Basics Community, there are easily accessible resources in community settings and online toolkits for parents as well as for providers. The toolkits include information about The Basics Principles and associated caregiving practices in videos, on downloadable tip sheets, and in a range of other forms. Additional modes of information sharing include social media, public broadcasting, and print publications.

Nudges / Reminders

In a Basics Community, caregivers receive Basics Insights messaging. Parents, grandparents, and other caregivers enroll to receive up to five years of science-based facts and brain-building activity ideas delivered twice-weekly to their smartphones starting at the child’s birth. The messages are nudges—important reminders—to apply The Principles routinely.

Social Reinforcement

In a Basics Community, social reinforcement leverages the other gears and amplifies their impact. Trusted messengers in local service organizations, family members, friends, and even strangers direct people to learning experiences in Basics workshops and events, point them to online resources, and strike up conversations about The Basics Principles or the text messages or other topics related to early childhood thriving.

Get Involved

All this means that in a Basics Community, The Basics Principles become central to how the whole community prepares infants, toddlers, and preschoolers for school and for life.

In a Basics Community, what none of us can achieve alone, all of us can achieve together.

If you represent an organization:

Learn about our offerings and process for partnering with organizations on engaging families with The Basics.


If you are a parent or caregiver

Parents and caregivers play critical leadership roles in helping to spread The Basics in their communities. Reach out to learn about ways to join the movement.


No matter who you are

Live The Basics and share them with the parents and caregivers in your life.