1 / 31

Early Contact with Parents:

A comprehensive resource kit for parents and professionals to access information on hearing loss, delivered in a sensitive and helpful way. Developed by Oakland Schools Intermediate Service District.

dcasiano
Download Presentation

Early Contact with Parents:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Resource Kit for Parents and Professionals Janet Gilbert, Ed.D. Mary Ann Lyon, MA, CCC/A Susan Swartz, MA, CCC/SLP Early Contact with Parents: EHDI National Conference Salt Lake City 2007

  2. Who are we? Oakland Schools Intermediate Service District (ISD) was established in Michigan in 1962. It is a regional service agency offering support services to school personnel that are best delivered regionally, as measured by cost, size and quality advantages. Oakland Schools is an autonomous, tax-supported public school district governed by Michigan General School Laws.

  3. What do we do? • Align activities with the Michigan School Improvement Framework • Leadership regarding best practice • Encourage and facilitate school/community relation • Support school personnel and families

  4. How do we do it? • Awareness…. • Collaboration…. • Technology…. • Support for families and professionals of children who are Deaf/Hard of Hearing

  5. What’s this kit all about? • A learning opportunity for families and the community to access information efficiently and in the comfort of their own surroundings

  6. What we believe… • People have limited time and want to access information on their own • Information needs to be both general and specific • Target the needs of the community • Value diversity of thought

  7. We started assessing our needs….

  8. Identification Rates By Disability 2005 The state of Michigan provides special education services to children ages Birth to 26 December 1, 2005/MICIS

  9. Oakland County Demographics • Total students 230,000 • Total Special Ed. students 25,335 • Deaf/H of H (K-12) 383 • Deaf/H of H (3-5 yrs.) 25 • Deaf/H of H (birth-3) 21 Special education count, 2006

  10. Oakland County Demographics (cont.) • 14,623 births • 100% participation by hospitals in UNHS (state) • 14 diagnosed with hearing loss • 7 undetermined • Five county area • 6 diagnostic centers (birth-6 months) • 28 diagnostic / follow-up centers (6 months-5 yrs.) EHDI Program, 2005 statistics

  11. Oakland County Population : 1.2 million U.S. Census Bureau, 2004

  12. What did we find out as we started peeling the onion? • Educational services are available for babies and a referral process is in place • Level of awareness of information about hearing loss was variable • Understanding about parents’ feelings was variable

  13. What did we do next? • Parent information through interview • Systems review of referral process • Review of available materials

  14. We listened to, and valued, our comments from families….. “I just need some basic information…” “Too much information too soon” “The process is so different from one parent to the next” “An unbiased list of resources and where to get them”

  15. Systems review of the referral process

  16. Reviewed available materials • A lot out there but it didn’t meet our needs • Hearing loss • Sensitivity • Ease of distribution • Specific to our county • Cost

  17. What issues did we decide to target? • Level of awareness of information about hearing loss • Referral from diagnosis to intervention • Delivery of information about hearing loss in a sensitive way

  18. A Resource Kit for Parents and Professionals

  19. Components of the kit • Hearing Loss: Delivering the Diagnosis in a Helpful Way • Quick Start Guide • Introduction to Hearing Loss

  20. Development of the DVD • Access to facilities, technology and personnel to develop and produce • Time

  21. Development of the Guide • Levels of involvement • Selection of stakeholders • Scheduled meetings • Facilitation of meetings • Production and resources

  22. The video selection • Review videos • Video selection • Sensitivity • Diversity • Cost • Ease of access in attaining

  23. Video - Introduction to Hearing Loss www.med.umich.edu/childhearinginfo/

  24. CD - Infant Hearing Guide National Center for Hearing Assessment & Management (NCHAM) Utah State University 2880 Old Main Hill Logan UT 84322-2880 (attn: Kim Palmer)

  25. DVD - Hearing Loss- Delivering the Diagnosis in a Helpful Way Oakland Schools 2111 Pontiac Lake Road Waterford, MI 48328 (attn: Mary Ann Lyon)

  26. Factors in Distribution • Maximize effect • Parents • Physicians - awareness of hearing loss and family feelings, and to explain the referral process in Oakland County • Educators and Community Partners • Awareness of hearing loss and family feelings • What families would be receiving from diagnostic centers

  27. Challenges • Funding • Administrative support • Appropriate materials • Time • Stakeholder selection and commitment • Diversity of perspective • Development of group processes • Setting timelines and developing a product • Distribution

  28. Final Thoughts • To develop a resource kit tailored to your needs ... • Needs assessment including resources • Develop or purchase materials • Distribution plan

  29. “Thus, the source of change and growth for an organization or an individual is to…..” Margaret J. Wheatley and Myron-Kellner Rogers, A Simpler Way, 1996

  30. To contact us…. • Janet.Gilbert@oakland.k12.mi.us • MaryAnn.Lyon@oakland.k12.mi.us • Susan.Swartz@oakland.k12.mi.us

More Related