Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House
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Carole Anne House, Lone Barn Stables, Stanbridge Lane
Romsey Extra, eng SO51 0HE - (179) 451-6622
Hours
Chamber Rating
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EliYah Yahweh
Mar 18th, 2023 -
Alexandra W
Jan 20th, 2023 -
Josh Lister
Mar 21st, 2022 -
vanessa mclaughlin
Mar 19th, 2022 -
ANTONY MAYNARD
Mar 17th, 2022
About
Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House
Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House is located at Carole Anne House, Lone Barn Stables, Stanbridge Lane in Romsey Extra, England SO51 0HE. Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House can be contacted via phone at (179) 451-6622 for pricing, hours and directions.
Contact Info
- (179) 451-6622
Questions & Answers
Q What is the phone number for Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House?
A The phone number for Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House is: (179) 451-6622.
Q Where is Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House located?
A Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House is located at Carole Anne House, Lone Barn Stables, Stanbridge Lane, Romsey Extra, eng SO51 0HE
Q What is the internet address for Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House?
A The website (URL) for Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House is: http://www.chancesgiveschoices.com/
Q What days are Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House open?
A Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House is open:
Thursday: 9:00 AM - 9:00 AM
Friday: 9:00 AM - 9:00 AM
Saturday: 9:00 AM - 9:00 AM
Sunday: 9:00 AM - 9:00 AM
Monday: 9:00 AM - 6:00 PM
Tuesday: 9:00 AM - 6:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 9:00 AM
Q How is Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House rated?
A Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House has a 4.0 Star Rating from 51 reviewers.
Hours
Ratings and Reviews
Chances Gives Choices, Carole Anne House & Richard Alan House
Overall Rating
Overall Rating
( 51 Reviews )![](/images/review-avatar-3.jpg)
EliYah Yahweh on Google
They all are happy to help, their willingness, kindness, care and support makes this place one of the Holy place on earth man
They all are proper legends
I love places designed for the best of children and people who are kind for children. That's what these people are.
Dear Sharna, Claire, Karha, Darren, Cara, Ashleigh, Holly and all of you, please allow me to say a huge thank you on behalf of all loving parents and adorable children whom you make happy with your amazing services. Thank you
Wond.
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Alexandra W on Google
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Josh Lister on Google
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vanessa mclaughlin on Google
Today I am going to talk about a very real issue of bias and need for resource at the strategic level. When dealing with early interventions within child related associations, where people undertake positions with the wish to help children.
However human nature inevitably will take its course and opinions are formed when dealing with cases. The issue I have come across is that this is normally peer influenced and facts can be ignored. Gossip is a dangerous event in these environments that can lead to those personalities less trained in transferring that bias into documentation.
Once one person writes a viewpoint another is likely to follow. Human behaviour research by a psychologist Stanley Milgram, provided evidence to how this occurs within his experiment of 'obedience to authority'. Milgrams work studied how people do harm to others under certain conditions, those everyday people of good nature will follow the authoritative figure and do harm. One aspect of someone more likely to do so, was if one of your peers obeyed an instruction from an authoritative figure, which is likely to result in another person directly in that environment more likely to accept the situation and follow suit.
This happens in schools and in infrastructures of early intervention. What has occurred to me is that training on this should take place if people are to recognize this to prevent documentation being falsified due to bias.
These documents can have detrimental effects for any child and their family, when they snowball and arrive in front of a judge, to which this judge sees them as evidence and bases his/her decision for that child as such. Perhaps the courts are not always to be blamed for decisions that go against the child interest if they are to follow evidence that suggests the victim is not telling the truth.
The very real consequences of those individuals being biased when taken to the point they are willing to miss informed documents, should be held accountable. The only way around this is for specialist training to take place to learn the effects of biased views and how to recognize when this is occurring in order to avoid such events from taking place. It is in my opinion that the government should hire behavioural psychologists to construct a training programme that should be implemented through all interventions of child associations.
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ANTONY MAYNARD on Google