Year of Healthy Children and Families
Year of Healthy Children and Families
College of Health
College of Health announces “Year of Children and Families”
Join in celebrating the OSU Child Development Center’s centennial and the
Hallie Ford Center’s 15th anniversary
In 2026, the College of Health celebrates a century of helping give children the best start in life. For 100 years, the OSU Child Development Center has served local children and families while preparing future early childhood educators and serving as a living laboratory for child researchers.
At the same time, the Hallie E. Ford Center for Healthy Children and Families is celebrating its 15th year promoting the development and well-being of children, youth and families by generating, translating and sharing research-based knowledge that impacts people across Oregon and beyond.
Events
Events supporting healthy children and families.
- April 10: Beyond Gamification: Using Robots to Unlock the Power of People Through Play
- May 29: 2026 Schild Nicholson Neurodiversity Lecture “The Enduring Impact of Prenatal Alcohol Exposure: Research Examining Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders at Midlife
- October: 2026 Campbell Lecture
- TBD: HFC 15-year celebration
- TBD: CDC 100th anniversary celebration
Dedicated to Healthy Children and Families
These College of Health centers and programs are committed to improving children’s health and well-being.
Hallie E. Ford Center
The Hallie E. Ford Center at OSU promotes child and family well-being through research, training and outreach. Interdisciplinary approach serving Oregon and beyond.
OSU Child Development Center
The OSU Child Development Center discovers and disseminates knowledge that contributes to the optimal development and well-being of young children and their families. It is the only program in Oregon that provides student teaching in a combined Head Start and tuition paying prekindergarten lab setting.
HFC centers, programs and groups
The Hallie E. Ford Center houses research centers, programs, and faculty groups focused on early childhood, parenting education, family policy, and children's environmental health.
IMPACT & IMPACT for Life
IMPACT is a physical activity program for children, youth and young adults with disabilities.
IMPACT for Life is a transitioning service program offshoot from IMPACT and integrates adults with disabilities into community physical activity opportunities including local gyms, swim clubs and indoor rock climbing
Extension Family and Community Health
Housed on campus and in communities across the state, College of Health faculty funded by OSU Extension Family and Community Health partner in communities to promote healthy nutrition, food safety and security, physical activity, behavioral/mental health and well-being, emergency preparedness, community resilience and more.
Good News and Stories
The Questing Clovers Retreat brings together Oregon teens who love gaming, cosplay and fantasy role-play in an inclusive 4-H camp environment. Participants in grades 7-12 explore creativity through workshops like Dungeons & Dragons, archery, potions and live-action role-playing.
Mary Arnold co-edited a new volume that brings together scholars and practitioners to bridge research and practice in positive youth development.
Learn how ADD and ADHD affect your child's brain and discover practical parenting strategies to help them thrive. Build on their strengths while supporting their unique needs.
The College of Health is partnering with Teaching Preschool Partners and the LEGO Foundation to bring evidence-based Active Playful Learning to Oregon preschool classrooms in fall 2025, supporting both academic and life skills development.
Teaching children digital literacy goes beyond screen time limits. Discover social-emotional strategies that help kids think critically about online content and stay safe.
Congratulations to Megan MacDonald, who received the G. Lawrence Rarick Research Award in July from the National Consortium for Physical Education for Individuals with Disabilities (NCPEID).