Get Involved

There is a place for you in this work.

Whether you're a family wanting to grow stronger, a leader wanting to bring the curriculum home, or an institution ready to partner — here's where to start.

Three Ways In

Choose your starting point

FOR FAMILIES

Join a Group

Take the 10-session curriculum with your spouse or as a family, hosted by a local church, community center, or partner organization near you.

FOR LEADERS

Host the Curriculum

Bring the full course to your congregation, school, or community group. We provide facilitator notes, handouts, and session guides.

FOR PARTNERS

Partner With Us

Government agencies, NGOs, schools, and faith communities can co-deliver programs, fund materials, or open new "gates" of outreach.

Take It Home

Strengthening Your Family, Strengthening Our Nation

A one-page summary, written simply enough to hand out and put into practice this week.

Family Handout Print-friendly
  • 01Prioritize your marriage. Spend time communicating and showing love. Resolve conflict with respect — a strong marriage provides a stable home.
  • 02Make time as a family. Regular family meals, prayers, or devotions matter — parents are a child's first educators.
  • 03Educate your children. Support their schooling, teach honesty and hard work, and help with homework.
  • 04Share responsibilities. Make joint decisions, share chores, and listen to each other's needs.
  • 05Nurture each child. Recognize each child's gifts and needs; discipline with love, not just correction.
  • 06Get involved in your community. Protect and mentor not just your own children, but others too.
  • 07Seek help when needed. Join a parent support group or faith-based family program — don't carry hardship alone.
  • 08Support family-friendly policy. Advocate at work or in local councils for flexible hours and parental leave.
Working Together

Who we build this with

The curriculum reaches families through a wide circle of partners, each bringing a different strength.

  • Government agencies — ministries of education, health, and social welfare providing policy support and funding.
  • Religious & community leaders — churches, mosques, and family associations mobilizing participants.
  • Educational institutions — schools and adult-education centers hosting workshops.
  • NGOs & family counselors — co-facilitating sessions and providing follow-up support.
  • Families themselves — active participants who go on to mentor others as peer leaders.
Ready When You Are

Bring this work to your community

Tell us about your church, school, or organization, and we'll help you find the right way to start — from a single family group to a full 10-session program.

Start the Conversation