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Am I Coaching? A Podcast for Early Interventionists

Am I Coaching? A Podcast for Early Interventionists
Author: Rainbows & Rain
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© Copyright Erika C. Bowen 2022 All rights reserved.
Description
Welcome to the podcast for Early Interventionists. My name is Erika Bowen and I am an Early Childhood Special Education Teacher in Minnesota servicing children with disabilities and their families from birth to age 3. Listen to stories of visits and practices from the field. Join me in my reflection as I work to empower caregivers to help their children learn and grow through everyday learning opportunities. Hear how I bring research on the road; how I struggle, succeed and find humor in it all!
40 Episodes
Reverse
As promised here is the handout "Delayed Response" I reference in my story when I was observing an incidental caregiver/child interaction. In this episode I go through these these reflective statements regarding Observation, Discussion and Problem Solving:
*I initiate a discussion about the family's priorities, needs and plans for the visit.
*I have reflective conversations to help the caregivers think through what they know, have already tried or want to change.
*I observe caregiver-child interactions and family routines and activities whenever I can.
*I begin by specifically defining the problem.
*I collaborate with the caregiver to solve the problem by bouncing ideas back and forth.
*I problem-solve with the caregiver in the moment while observing a routine, activity or interaction.
*After problem solving, I let the caregiver decide which strategy to try with the child.
Self Reflection: "Am I coaching," when it comes to the coaching characteristic of practice?
Listen as I take on the following self reflective questions that may get you thinking on your own interactions with families and how to continue to grow.
I convey the idea to the caregiver that each intervention visit is a practice session for the child and caregiver.
I use modeling as a teaching tool to help the caregiver learn to use the strategy.
When I model with their child I shift the interaction back to the caregiver so the caregiver can practice and feel successful.
I help the caregiver practice during routines and activities that re natural to them and in real time.
I coach the caregiver from the sidelines and fade my support over time so they feel joy in their accomplishments that they can do this without me.
I do my best to be patient and celebrate practice whenever it happens.
All Things Early Intervention TPT store resources for anyone working in EI!
Pause & Reflect by Dana Childress
An IFSP meeting like I've never had before and will never forget. Do you know what's been said to families before you enter their lives? Hear what this mother was told after the diagnosis of Pader Willi Syndrome was confirmed after her son's birth. It finally came out while discussing the goal for the IFSP. It became very apparent that this mother did not know she could even want things for her son because of what "the doctor said."
All Things Early Intervention
I've been thinking a lot about families. How to connect intervention with everyday opportunities and it all comes down to parent/child engagement. This episode I reflect on what I am learning through Autism Navigator and what they call "the layer cake." Building support from the bottom up. Let's face it; if our cake isn't baked, it's going to fall - or at the very least be uneven!
Autism Navigator
All Things Early Intervention - parent handouts
"The Layer Cake"
A listener recently reached out asking me to podcast on specific strategies I use with families and on visits. Great idea and great topic! Hear what has worked best during visits - I share 3 very different stories of kids at the same level doing very different things. If you are new to EI this is a must hear episode!
Find Coaching Resources at: All Things Early Intervention
Feedback can get pretty muddy. Listen as I reference Rush and Sheldon and put into real life context how this looks.
Handouts for Parents and EI providers
It’s a follow-up on today’s episode to last week’s, “He’s not making progress.” Hear what one listener wrote to me and about how she relates. This is a common theme among all of us in EI. I finished and created an entire series for parents and EI providers who are coaching to help parents understand communication, the skills involved and how it ties to their ultimate goal of, “I want my child to talk.” Without losing focus on Coaching during visits! Today I share a story of success when I didn’t tell a parent what to do but gave her the AT her daughter needed. With the right tool she was able to put it into practice in a way you would not expect but worked for them! Check out the entire series on my “All Things Early Intervention” storefront on Teachers Pay Teachers.
Get the, "I want my child to talk." series to help support your visits coaching families.
I get a call from my supervisor that the family is requesting another service provider because he’s not making progress. We know the “what” and the “why” kids need to work on the skills they do BUT do parents understand the “what” and the “why”??? How can we help parents to understand? When parents do understand, let them figure out how they're going to do it. Sometimes we focus so much on the “how” first without pausing (to explain, model, discuss, give feedback on) “what” and “why” and then our message gets lost on them. Listen as I try to make sense of all of this.
Check out the resources below for parents. Teach them the "what" and the "why" let them figure out the "how." Stay tuned for more resources in the series "I want my child to talk."
I want my child to talk.
Move to Communicate
Did you hear that bomb! Ever felt one during a visit? I did! I dive into reflection during this episode. The first thing you need to do in order to reflect is STOP. Reflection requires you to be present, to be open and to be ok with pausing during a visit to reflect with the caregiver. Stop thinking about what you are going to say or do and reflect. I'll go through the 4 types of reflective questions; when and how I like to use them and what my favorite "go-to" questions are. Hear what I say when I don't know what to say next.
R-E-F-L-E-C-T find out what it means to me! Check out this awesome video from Rush and Sheldon too!
What we say matters! Is what you're saying meaning the same to the family you are saying it too? If we want parents to do the work and feel confident doing the work we need to use words they understand and are in simple basic terms. This includes how we write our IFSP outcomes. Check out these tips and techniques on writing "family participation based outcomes."
Not only do we need to meet families where they are at we need to meet our colleagues where they are at. For me that means stepping off my soap box and letting others speak their opinions, feelings and beliefs so we can move forward in discussion and growth.
They're awkward! First visits are your first shot at setting the stage for effective coaching visits! Like a first date you want there to be a second date and it all depends on how the date (I mean visit - lol) goes and of course how will it end! What can you do to make connections, build rapport and set up expectations? What is the one thing everyone clearly understands? Find out on this episode!
It's easy to do. Especially when you're in a middle of visit and parents are chasing him to engage and he's escaping, avoiding and seeking movement. Who's priorities do you follow? Parents have their priorities and this child has another. This episode looks at a visit where I went into a backwards slide to try and fix this interaction and then ultimately rebounded in the same visit and got back on track with coaching to increase parent/child engagement. I explain the value of feedback and what it means to use our knowledge and expertise to increase caregiver understanding. Coaching is not "this or that" you don't have to leave all the old "toy bag" strategies behind; take those strategies and use them in a more intentional way.
As I start the new school year I'm reflecting on how to get ready for visits with new families. How do I set the stage for visits? How do I communicate what parents can expect on visits while balancing the needs of families? Here is the link to the video I mentioned in the podcast from Early Intervention Coaching. It's a great refresher and load off our backs when we don't strive for "best" or "perfect" or "ideal." We are meeting the needs of caregivers and building caregiver capacity. Today I reflect on an initial IFSP meeting and something I said to help the parent see what her role was going to be on visits for her daughter.
Coaching is hard! Why is it so hard! It's hard because coaching requires you to be responsive to the caregiver, the child and the family. It requires flexibly, spontaneity and intentional planning. Coaching doesn't come from a bag you take from home to home. If you did have to pack a bag to bring to a home visit what would you pack?
*Joint Planning
*Reflection
*Feedback
*Observation
*Practice
You would also pack your undeniable and vast knowledge, resources, expertise and strategies (don't forget to pack the family priorities)! Listen as I build a visit like a sandwich. What holds it together and keeps it from falling a part? What do we put in the middle of our visit/sandwich? How many recipes are there for sandwiches?? As many recipes there are for families! And no two sandwiches (I mean visits) will look a like!
Welcome new friends and old to the Podcast! Thank you for being my co-host in this episode and sending me your thoughts, questions and feedback! Hear how to connect a parent's goal for their child to where their child is at right now and come up with a plan to work towards that ultimate goal of the parent or caregivers! Other hot topics include direct teaching, joint planning and how to get parents to "buy into" the parent/caregiver coaching style of Early Intervention.
It's raining on the podcast! I reflect on an update from a family I've previously podcasted about (Great Expectations 1 & 2). I also had the opportunity to have a reflective conversation with a team member and try my peer coaching skills with a team mate who is struggling. Through this rain I'm embracing the fact that growth will (eventually) come!
What do you say? When do you say it? How do you say it? Coaching is an interaction style you use when talking and interacting with caregivers. Having your own "go to" catchphrases can help remember what to say, when to say it and how to say it! These are some of my favorites that work for me when it comes to the five coaching characteristics. What works for you? Hear what happens when caregivers start to learn your catchphrases!
Erika's Coaching Catchphrases
Sometimes engaging families is easy. Sometimes engaging families is hard. What makes this task so hard sometimes? What should I be doing that I'm not doing? Do you ever feel like it's "raining" before you even get to the visit? These are the visits we maybe don't look forward to. Listen as I reflect on a conversation I had with a colleague that made me reflect on a visit I currently have with a family. Both of us turned to the FGRBI website for resources, tips and support! Listen to hear what we found! Click the link below to find it for you too!
www.fgrbi.com
Back to basics...the 5 characteristics of coaching. Coaching is an interaction style. It's how we interact with families. It's how we talk with families. It's intentional; and it's not always easy! Listen as I review the 5 characteristics. Does each one happen on every visit? Is there an order to any of it? Hear my "coaching truths" as I share what's hard for me on visits and I how I try and overcome roadblocks.
Don't forget to follow on instagram @rainbows_rain_podcast