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Family Ecology

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Early Intervention Training Center for Infants and Toddlers With Visual Impairments ... as task lighting, optical aids, or brightly colored ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Family Ecology


1
Family-Centered Practices
Support-Based Early Intervention and Developing
Ecomaps Session 3
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Early Intervention Training Center for Infants
and Toddlers With Visual Impairments FPG Child
Development Institute Produced in collaboration
with R.A. McWilliam (2002)
2
Objectives
  • After completing this session, participants will
  • describe why all high-quality early intervention
    practices are considered support contrast
    support and services and describe the three
    types of support that should be provided to
    families by early interventionists.
  • 2. discuss the importance of focusing on family
    strengths.
  • 3. describe why a TVI in early intervention is
    interested in family members, friends, and
    other natural supports.

PowerPoint 3A
3
Objectives
  • demonstrate the completion of an ecomap and
    describe its advantages.
  • describe how teachers of children with
    visual impairments (TVIs) work in collaboration
    with other professionals in the early
    intervention system to provide support to
    families.

PowerPoint 3B
4
  • Early intervention is best described as a system
    of supports that enhances the capacity of
    families to meet the special needs of their
    children with disabilities.

PowerPoint 3C
5
Services versus Support
  • Services specific, discrete activities
    intended to meet specific, discrete needs
  • Support providing or coordinating resources
    to meet a familys needs

PowerPoint 3D
6
Early intervention is the process of providing
support, not just services.
  • Describing early intervention simply as the
    provision of services is limiting and inaccurate.
  • It suggests first that the professionals
    activities, rather than the familys own actions,
    account for progress and positive change
    within a family and the child.
  • It leads to the notion that every need requires
    a service.
  • It leads to the belief that more is better in
    terms of number of services and frequency of
    contacts.

PowerPoint 3E
7
Support-Based Intervention
  • McWilliam and Scott (2001) identified
    three primary types of support provided by
    early interventionists
  • emotional support,
  • material support, and
  • informational support.


PowerPoint 3F
8
Emotional Support
  • Emotionally supportive, family-centered
  • practitioners have the following characteristics
  • positiveness,
  • responsiveness,
  • orientation to the whole family,
  • friendliness,
  • sensitivity,
  • competence with and about children, and
  • competence with and about communities.
  • McWilliam et al., 1998


PowerPoint 3G
9
Material Support
  • Families cannot carry out interventions if their
  • needs for food, shelter, and security are not
    met.
  • Sometimes children with VI require specialized
  • materials and environmental modifications such
  • as task lighting, optical aids, or brightly
    colored
  • objects to enhance participation in daily
    routines.
  • Examples
  • Equipment and supplies
  • Information about
  • resources, including
  • financial resources

PowerPoint 3H
10
Informational Support
  • Families whose child has a visual impairment
  • report concerns about the future and a need
  • for information about
  • child development,
  • childs visual condition,
  • services and resources, and
  • specific strategies and skills.

  • Leyser Heinze, 2001

PowerPoint 3I
11
Support-Based Intervention Versus Child-Centered
Therapy
  • Support-based intervention
  • Interventionist works with family and child one
    hour each week, sharing informational support
    with parent. Parent works with child multiple
    times during the day, 7 days each week.
  • Child learns from repeated interactions spread
    out over time.
  • Child-centered therapy
  • Interventionist works with child one hour
    each week
  • Young children do not generalize from therapy
    sessions to real life, and they do not learn in
    massed trials or intensive lessons.

Child-centered therapy can provide families with
informational support if families are actively
engaged in the process. The family can provide
intervention throughout the day and week.
PowerPoint 3J
12
TVIs and Support-Based Intervention
  • Expertise and knowledge are shared with
    parents and other team members, enlisting their
    participation in interventions throughout the
    week (Correa, 2002).
  • Sharing techniques and the rationale for
    interventions with parents and encouraging
    parents to work with the child increases the
    amount of support the child receives
    (McWilliam, 2000).

PowerPoint 3K
13
PowerPoint 3L
14
Families are the key to effective early
intervention.
  • Family members are the childs primary
    sources of nurturance, lifelong advocates,
    and key decision makers.
  • Family members know the child better than anyone
    else.
  • Family members are the ones who will be
    most effective at implementing suggestions.
  • In order to implement family-centered support
    effectively, professionals must look for
    strengths in families.

PowerPoint 3M
15
Focusing on Family and Child Strengths
  • When emphasis is on strengths rather than
    deficits, the family is empowered.
  • Fewer professional services may be required when
    a strengths-based approach is used.
  • Collaboration between family and service
    providers is enhanced when professionals
    recognize and value existing strengths.
  • The knowledge, skills, and talents of both the
    child and family should be considered in
    intervention planning and implementation.

PowerPoint 3N
16
Support-Based Early Intervention and the Family
Ecology
  • In addition to support from professionals,
    families obtain support from relatives and
    friends, neighbors, coworkers, and groups
    with which they are associated.
  • The system of supports that families have
    is part of the family ecology.
  • By knowing about the family ecology, the
    TVI can make suggestions that ensure
    that family priorities are met with existing
    resources whenever feasible.

PowerPoint 3O
17
Whats the best time to ask about the family
ecology?
  • If family members are interested, the initial
  • intake visit is the preferred time to learn about
  • the family ecology. This can be postponed,
  • however, if
  • the family seems uncomfortable sharing this
    personal information so early in the
    relationship, or
  • the intake procedures preclude learning about the
    family ecology.

PowerPoint 3P
18
Purposes of the Intake Visit
  • Establish rapport with the family.
  • Convey information about the program.
  • Determine familys primary concerns.
  • Inform family of their rights.
  • Secure permission to conduct
  • assessments.
  • Learn about the
  • family ecology.24

PowerPoint 3Q
19
Methods of Learning About the Family Ecology
  • Interviews and questionnaires
  • Observation
  • Community resource mapping
  • Ecomaps

PowerPoint 3R
20
What is an ecomap?
  • A visual depiction of the familys informal,
    formal, and intermediate system of supports
  • Completed during informal dialogue between family
    and early interventionist or TVImay take about
    15 minutes
  • Preferably completed during intake visit, but can
    be completed whenever family seems comfortable
    with sharing the information

PowerPoint 3S
21
Steps in Mapping the Family Ecology Informal
Supports
  • Write the names of the people who live in the
    home in the center of the map. Draw a box
    around those names.
  • Above the family box, write the names of
    relatives and friends who can be counted as
    supports. These are informal supports. Draw boxes
    around them and connect to the family box
    using
  • bold lines for strong support,
  • medium lines for medium support, and
  • dotted lines to indicate stressful relationships.
  • (Note a relationship can be supportive and
    stressful
  • at the same time.)

PowerPoint 3T
22
Informal Supports
PowerPoint 3U
23
Steps in Mapping the Family EcologyFormal and
Intermediate Supports
  • Write the names of agencies, professionals such
    as doctors or therapists, and other individuals
    in boxes for formal supports below the family.
    Again, connect these boxes with the family via
    solid or broken lines.
  • Write the names of coworkers, other colleagues,
    and group associations to either side of the
    family. These are intermediate supports and are
    connected by solid or broken lines as well.
  • A more thorough outline of the steps taken in
    developing an ecomap are found in the handout
    Understanding the Family Ecology.

  • McWilliam,
    2001

PowerPoint 3V
24
Informal and Formal Supports
PowerPoint 3W
25
PowerPoint 3X
26
Review How to Develop an Ecomap
  • Family in center
  • Informal supports above
  • Formal supports below
  • Intermediate supports on sides
  • Thick lines indicate more support,
  • thin lines indicate less support
  • Dotted lines indicate stress

PowerPoint 3Y
27
TVIs and Collaboration
  • TVIs should provide family-centered support
  • while ensuring that the impact of visual
  • impairment on child development is
  • recognized and addressed by each early
  • intervention team member by
  • sharing vision-related information and resources
    through consultation, and
  • assisting other team members in understanding
    issues related to vision and development.

PowerPoint 3Z
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