Spanish Forms for PC-CARE
Here are some of the individual PC-CARE Forms in Spanish. If you are being trained in PC-CARE, you will have access to the full Spanish Supplemental Materials, located in a OneDrive folder. The link to the full materials folder is available on the page Phase II: Continuing Your PC-CARE Journey.
If you are a Spanish speaker and have feedback or requests regarding our Spanish forms, please email PC-CAREAdminTeam@groups.ucdavis.edu. Please note that we are working to translate all of the PC-CARE materials to Spanish as quickly as we can.
PC-CARE Forms En Español
- En Español – PC-CARE Flyer: What is PC-CARE?
- En Español – PC-CARE Syllabus: 6 Weeks
- En Español – Developmental Milestones
- En Español – PRIDE Skills Handout
- En Espanol – How & Why of Daily CARE for Younger Children
- En Español – Babies & Toddlers Trauma-Related Behaviors Handout
- En Español – Ages 2 to 5 Stress Related Behaviors
- En Español – Ages 2 to 5 Trauma Related Behaviors
- En Español – Ages 6 to 10 Stress Related Behaviors
- En Español – Ages 6 to 10 Trauma Related Behaviors
- En Español – Coping & Relaxation Skills Ages 2-6
Session Strategies — Parent Handouts
Coming Soon. The full Spanish materials are located in the OneDrive folder provided to those in Phase II of PC-CARE Training.
- En Español – All Session Strategies PDF
To print/save one session handout only, click the print button and type in which pages you want to be printed or saved.
Strategies Questionnaires en Español
- Español Session 1 – Strategies Learned – Will They Work For Us?
- Español Session 2 – Strategies Learned – Will They Work For Us?
- Español Session 3 – Strategies Learned – Will They Work For Us?
- Español Session 4 – Strategies Learned – Will They Work For Us?
- Español Session 5 – Strategies Learned – Will They Work For Us?
- Español Session 6 – Which Strategies Worked Best / Liked the Most?


The UC Davis CAARE Center is funded by the Center for Mental Health Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) (SM63268). The views and opinions of authors expressed in this (document, product, web site) do not necessarily state or reflect those of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).