header image

[Sign Up Now] to Receive Our FREE Daily SCVTV-SCVNews Digest by E-Mail

Inside
Weather


 
Calendar
Today in
S.C.V. History
July 3
1925 - By letter, Wyatt Earp beseeches his friend William S. Hart to portray him in a movie, to correct the "lies about me." Hart never did. [story]
Hart-Wyatt Earp


Raising a child is a demanding job for any parent, especially when supportive resources seem to be elusive or nonexistent. For families whose children have special needs, the task can be even harder.

California State University, Northridge special education professor Ivor Weiner has spent most of his professional life working to ensure those with special needs and their families get the support and respect they deserve. For his efforts, Weiner has been awarded one of the California State University’s highest honors, the Wang Family Excellence Award.

The honor is given each year to four CSU faculty members and one CSU administrator for their exemplary achievements and contributions to the CSU system.

The awards, which include $20,000 to each recipient, were established through a gift from CSU Trustee Emeritus Stanley T. Wang and administered through the CSU Foundation.

Weiner will formally receive the honor on Jan. 30 at a meeting of the CSU Board of Trustees in Long Beach.

Weiner said he was thrilled to receive the honor, noting that he found out he had been selected for the Wang Award just before the holidays.

“It was a great holiday gift,” he said.

In his letter to Weiner informing him of the honor, CSU Chancellor Timothy P. White said the Wang Family Excellence Award recipients, “through extraordinary commitment and dedication, have distinguished themselves in their academic disciplines or university assignments.”

CSUN President Dianne F. Harrison said she was proud to nominate Weiner for the Wang Award.

“Dr. Weiner has a stellar record of achievement and contribution at CSUN, spanning more than 15 years,” Harrison said. “His work demonstrates extraordinary commitment, truly enhancing our reputation for excellence in teaching, research and community engagement.”

Weiner — a leader in the field of special education, particularly working with those with disabilities — was singled out for his work with the Family Focus Resource Center.

The center, housed in CSUN’s Michael D. Eisner College of Education, provides parent-to-parent support, education and information to parents and caregivers of children with special needs and the professionals who serve them.

It works closely with the North Los Angeles County Regional Center — a nonprofit organization that provides and facilitates support services for individuals and families of people with developmental disabilities.

The center provides and facilitates support services to more than 1,500 families and individuals throughout north Los Angeles County, including the San Fernando, Santa Clarita and Antelope Valleys.

Weiner said winning the Wang Award is an acknowledgement of the “powerful” work being done by the staff of the Family Focus Resource Center, most of whom have children with disabilities and can empathize with the struggles their clients face as they try to navigate medical, educational or governmental agencies and organizations that are supposed to help them.

“We embrace the parents who come to us, which is at about the time they learn their child has a disability, and we apply a strength-based approach,” Weiner said. “This is not a doom-and-gloom diagnosis. There will be challenges, but there will be triumphs as well. Our job is to give parents the support and tools to overcome the bureaucracy so that their children can succeed to their fullest potential.”

The center also works closely with CSUN students to give them hands-on experience working with children with special needs and their families. Over the years, Weiner has secured more than $6 million in grant funding to support the center and its various outreach efforts, including a mobile van that goes out into the community to provide screening services.

Weiner, who has been a faculty member at CSUN since 2001, pointed out that the center does a lot of outreach in underrepresented communities to ensure families know about the resources that are out there to help them.

Center representatives are often the first people to inform those families of all the resources available to them and to provide them assistance in accessing those resources.

“Families come to us for one of three reasons,” he said. “They just found out that their child has been diagnosed at an early age. The sooner we can get to those children, the better the prognosis because we can start early intervention. Or, they come to us later in life. Maybe their child’s in middle school and is experiencing problems. The school isn’t providing sufficient special education services, and they need intervention. We are also able to help them at that point.

“And we have a lot of adults who are seeking a diagnosis late in life,” he said. “They come to us asking for referrals to medical professionals.”

For Weiner, helping the families and individuals who come to the center is personal. His daughter was diagnosed with severe autism when she was 2.

“I have advanced degrees in special education and access to tons of resources,” he said. “But when I got that diagnosis, all of that went out the window and emotions took over. Now, imagine you are parents without all the expertise and qualifications that I have, and you receive a diagnosis that your child has special needs. And then, try to navigate all these complex organizations — medical, educational — that you are supposed to go to for help. It can be overwhelming.

“The transformation I see in the families we help is inspiring,” he said. “Sometimes, it’s just knowing that there is someone on their side, who has been through it. Who can tell them, ‘It will be okay. I have gone through it too, and you will come out all right in the end.’ There is a great level of empowerment that can come from that.”

Weiner said his daughter, Layla, now a CSUN student, was elated when she learned he received the Wang Award.

“She has been the inspiration and major influence in my work,” he said. “So, in many ways, the honor is for her as well.”

Comment On This Story
COMMENT POLICY: We welcome comments from individuals and businesses. All comments are moderated. Comments are subject to rejection if they are vulgar, combative, or in poor taste.
REAL NAMES ONLY: All posters must use their real individual or business name. This applies equally to Twitter account holders who use a nickname.

0 Comments

You can be the first one to leave a comment.

Leave a Comment


HIGHER EDUCATION LINKS
LOCAL COLLEGE HEADLINES
Monday, Jul 1, 2024
As a high schooler, Angelina Zuniga Kramer accompanied her stepfather to construction sites where he worked, and it inspired her to dream big.
Friday, Jun 28, 2024
The Santa Clarita Community College District Board of Trustees will hold a special meeting Monday, July 1, beginning at 10 a.m.
Friday, Jun 28, 2024
Chuck Lyon, representing Trustee Area 1, resigned effective Thursday, June 27, from the Santa Clarita Community College District Board of Trustees.
Thursday, Jun 27, 2024
The College of the Canyons fall 2024 semester will offer more than 1,780 sections of high demand “core” classes in a wide range of academic subjects and disciplines, as well as various noncredit offerings.   
Wednesday, Jun 26, 2024
California State University, Northridge associate professor of Chicana/o studies Xóchitl Flores-Marcial’s work to document and preserve the Indigenous languages of Mexico has received recognition from the National Archives.
Keep Up With Our Facebook

Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
1925 - By letter, Wyatt Earp beseeches his friend William S. Hart to portray him in a movie, to correct the "lies about me." Hart never did. [story]
Hart-Wyatt Earp
With an excessive heat warning in effect this week, the city of Santa Clarita strongly urges residents to prioritize heat safety and preparedness during the Fourth of July Parade and the holiday weekend.
Stay Cool, Safe During the Fourth of July Holiday
California State Sen. Scott Wilk (R-Santa Clarita) hs announced his bill to make wildfire settlement payments tax-free cleared its first hurdle in the Assembly, passing out of the Committee on Revenue and Taxation.
Wilk’s Bill to Make Wildfire Settlements Tax-free Clears First Assembly Committee
Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) recently presented deputies from the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department with the highly esteemed MADD Award. This award recognizes their unwavering commitment to road safety and dedication to preventing the devastating consequences of drunk driving.
MADD Awards Presented to Pair of SCV Sheriff’s Station Deputies
The First Presbyterian Church of Newhall is hosting an eight-week grief and loss recovery group, scheduled to run 2-3:30 p.m. on eight consecutive Sundays, Sept. 15 through Nov. 3.
Sept. 15: Presbyterian Church Hosts Grief, Loss Recovery Group
The California Department of Motor Vehicles has introduced a new online case management system that provides faster response times. The modern digital system provides drivers, as well as their attorneys, with a more convenient way to interact with the Driver Safety office at the DMV.
DMV’s Driver Safety Team Provides New Online Access
The city of Santa Clarita has issued a traffic alert for residents traveling to Central Park, 27150 Bouquet Canyon Road, Santa Clarita, CA 91350.
Main Entrance to Central Park Closed for Parking Lot Paving
As an excessive heat warning descends upon portions of North County this week, including the Santa Clarita Valley, Los Angeles County officials remind SCV residents of county resources that bring free or low-cost heat relief.
County Offers Cooling Centers, Summer Pool Program
The Santa Clarita Valley opera company, Mission Opera opens its seventh Season Oct. 26-27 with "Cold Sassy Tree" by Carlisle Floyd, an American opera in English, based on the 1989 historical American novel by Olive Ann Burns.
Oct. 26-27: Mission Opera Presents ‘Cold Sassy Tree
Thanks to the cooperation and diligence of Santa Clarita Valley area residents and local agricultural officials, the California Department of Food and Agriculture, working in coordination with the United States Department of Agriculture and the Los Angeles County Agricultural Commissioner, has declared an end to the Tau fruit fly quarantine following the eradication of the invasive pest.
Tau Fruit Fly Quarantine Lifted in SCV
The Hello Auto Group has announced its third annual Back-to-School Backpack Drive. This year, the Hello Auto Group will partner with three Santa Clarita Valley school districts, Sulphur Springs Union School District, Newhall School District and Castaic Union School District, to support students preparing for the upcoming school year.
Hello Auto Group Launches Annual Back-to-School Backpack Drive
The Regal Summer Movie Express is underway offering family movies for $1 a ticket now through Aug. 7.
Family Movies $1 During Regal Summer Movie Express
The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Missing Persons Unit investigators are asking for the public’s help locating At Risk Missing Person Tim Paul Hood.
LASD Seeks Public’s Help Locating Man Missing from Canyon Country
1869 - Sanford Lyon (as in Lyons Avenue) appointed postmaster of Petroliopolis (today's Eternal Valley Cemetery area) [story]
Sanford Lyon
As a high schooler, Angelina Zuniga Kramer accompanied her stepfather to construction sites where he worked, and it inspired her to dream big.
CSUN Students Find Stable Living Situations Through CREA Scholarship
The Los Angeles County Health Officer has issued an excessive heat warning for the Santa Clarita Valley Wednesday through Monday, July 8 as high temperatures have been forecast.
Triple Digit Heat Coming to SCV
Six Flags Entertainment Corporation, the largest and most diverse amusement park operator in North America, announced Monday the successful completion of the merger of equals between Cedar Fair, L.P. and former Six Flags Entertainment Corporation, effective July 1, 2024.
Merger Between Six Flags, Cedar Fair Complete
Organizers for the Santa Clarita Shakespeare Festival summer camp were so blown away by the performances from its young actors in the Comedy of Errors, that the camp has decided to lower the age range of its next camp, which begins July 8.
Shakespeare Festival Summer Camp Lowers Age for Next Session
Mark your calendars for Agatha’s Murder Mystery Dinner Party, as it comes to The MAIN in Old Town Newhall Aug. 9, 10, 11 and Aug. 16, 17, 18.
‘Agatha’s Murder Mystery Dinner Party’ Coming to The MAIN in August
In preparation for the Independence Day holiday, the California Highway Patrol is launching a statewide enforcement effort aimed at keeping the public safe on our roads.
CHP Maximum Enforcement Period Launches Wednesday
Santa Clarita-based Lief Labs, a premier formulation and product development innovator and manufacturer of dietary supplements, welcomes Randy Rosinski as Chief Commercial Officer (CCO), leading Lief’s Sales and Marketing departments and joining the Executive Leadership team.
SCV-Based Lief Labs Names Randy Rosinski CCO
Saugus High School Instrumental Music Booster Club is inviting the community to help those in need with its Clothes for Cash campaign beginning Saturday, July 6, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Saugus High Music Club Clothes for Cash Campaign Begins July 6
The city of Santa Clarita’s Film Office has released the list of six productions currently filming in the Santa Clarita Valley for the week of Monday, July 1 - Sunday, July 7.
Six Productions Filming in Santa Clarita
By day, the sounds of music and laughter fill the streets as we celebrate Independence Day in true Santa Clarita fashion with the annual Fourth of July Parade.
Ken Striplin | Enjoy Fourth of July Responsibly
SCVNews.com