Reach
How many families, caregivers, youth, schools, and partner organizations participate.
- Participants served
- Households represented
- Organizations engaged
- Communities reached
Impact with integrity
Family PD is being relaunched as a Nevada nonprofit initiative. As programs begin, this page will track participation, outcomes, partnerships, resources, lessons learned, and community feedback.
What we will measure
Family PD will track both reach and change. Reach tells us who participated. Outcomes tell us whether the experience helped families understand, apply, or improve something meaningful.
How many families, caregivers, youth, schools, and partner organizations participate.
What participants understand better after using a tool or attending a program.
Whether families put new practices into use after the learning experience.
Changes families report across the five pillars over time.
Five-pillar outcomes
Families begin in different places. Progress will not look identical in every household. These examples show the kinds of changes Family PD programs are designed to support.
More consistent safety planning, health conversations, rest, appointments, or emotional check-ins.
More respectful communication, clearer boundaries, more repair, and less avoidable conflict.
Improved school monitoring, career awareness, skill building, credential planning, or advocacy.
Greater awareness of income, bills, spending, debt, saving, and family money decisions.
Clearer priorities, written steps, regular progress reviews, and stronger follow-through.
Early roots
Before it became a public initiative, Family PD was tested through regular family meetings, household expectations, emergency planning, progress checks, educational goals, and shared reflection.
These early observations helped shape the framework. They are not presented as a formal program evaluation.
The current nonprofit model is being built from these lived practices and updated with stronger evaluation methods.
How we will learn
Set clear goals and decide what success should look like before the program begins.
Gather appropriate attendance, feedback, tool-use, and outcome information.
Compare expected outcomes with what participants actually experienced.
Adjust materials, delivery, partnerships, and support based on what we learn.
Share meaningful results, limitations, lessons, and next steps with the community.
Accountability promise
We will avoid publishing personally identifying family information without clear permission.
“Reached,” “served,” “participated,” and “completed” will not be used as if they mean the same thing.
Early feedback, self-reported changes, and formal outcome data will be clearly distinguished.
What did not work, what changed, and what still needs improvement are part of honest reporting.
Funding, partnerships, and program decisions should support the mission and stated community needs.
Family feedback and community partnership will shape how the model grows.
Impact dashboard
The dashboard will begin after programs are delivered and reporting definitions are finalized. Until then, placeholders will remain clearly labeled rather than filled with estimates.
Reports & transparency
Future annual or program reports may include participation, outcomes, financial summaries, partnership highlights, lessons learned, and upcoming priorities.
Planned after the first full reporting period.
Not yet availableHelp shape the impact
Schools, nonprofits, libraries, employers, faith communities, and family-serving organizations can help build and test meaningful programs.