Early Intervention Strategies for Success

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  • 6 Key Ideas for Joint Planning with Parents(current)

I recently spoke with a mother who is a highly educated, early childhood professional and who received early intervention (EI) for her child. She Writing a note iconshared this insight with me: she loved when the therapist came to her home and looked forward to the visits because she was so eager to help her child. She also felt equally frustrated after each visit because the therapist would leave and she wasn’t sure how to use the intervention strategies during her daily routine. She paid close attention at each visit, and she and the therapist would discuss and practice what to do, but each time she was basically “left hanging,” unsure about how to intervene with her child’s development between visits. Think about this…here’s a mother who has professional expertise in early childhood, who is knowledgeable about EI, but who still struggled to use what she was learning. This insight reminded me that we really can do better to support all families during visits so they know what to do between visits.

What’s A Joint Plan?

One of the simplest and most effective things you can do during a visit to prepare a parent to know what to do and how to do it between visits is develop a joint plan. The joint plan is a key component of early childhood coaching as described by Rush and Shelden (2011). It’s also been called an intervention plan in other literature. The whole idea of the joint plan is to intentionally help the parent plan for how to use a strategy between visits when the provider is not present to provide support. It’s specific, individualized, and involves problem-solving and purposeful planning. It doesn’t have to be complicated and shouldn’t be very long. It may be a verbal or written agreement. It’s a simple technique that is usually easily integrated into your practice and one that helps parents remember what to do and how to do it. The hard part for providers is often just remembering to do a joint plan at each visit and follow-up on it at the next visit…once you’ve got that down, you’re half way there!

Watch this 30 sec video to hear from a different mother who explains the goal of early intervention. Her words will help you understand why developing a joint plan is so important!

6 Key Ideas for Joint Planning

Here are a six key ideas that will help you develop joint plans with the families you support:

1. Joint planning is NOT the same thing as prescribing homework – Homework is typically something we prescribe after the parent has watched us intervene with the child and often involves generic handouts. In contrast, the joint plan is a reciprocal process, with the parent equally and actively contributing ideas for how she/he plans to use what has been learned. The plan is also specific to a routine or activity that’s already a part of the family’s everyday life.

2. Joint planning begins with one simple question – And that question is: “Based on what we’ve practiced today, what would you like to do with your child between now and our next visit?” This question gives the parent permission to pick the thing that she thinks she can work into her day. This question facilitates reflection and gives you a sense of what she has understood, what is relevant to her, and what she thinks she can do. It also helps you focus the plan on something doable.

3. It is perfectly fine if the joint plan only focuses on 1-2 strategies – It’s been my experience that, when asked, most parents only picked 1-2 things to work on. In the past, many times I gave parents a laundry list of strategies and ideas, somehow expecting them to soak them all up. What I probably really did was completely overwhelm them. If the parent can really get the hang of a strategy or two and use it frequently with success, that’s a total win!

4. Make sure the joint plan is very specific and includes steps and a Plan B – The more specific the plan is, the easier it will be for the parent to know what and how to do it when you aren’t there. Specific doesn’t mean complicated, though. Rather than saying “prompt him for a word during lunch,” you and the parent could walk through the specific steps for how she will prompt the child using his favorite foods, in his kitchen, etc. I think it’s also a great idea to develop a Plan B. If the child doesn’t respond to the prompt, make sure the parent knows what else to try. Maybe she prompts just the first sound of the word or maybe she offers a choice next. A Plan B can help the parent feel successful when one strategy is less successful that expected because she has an alternative up her sleeve.

5. Writing the joint plan down on paper may be even better – I’ve a big fan of writing the plan down so that the parent doesn’t have to rely on her memory alone. Either you or the parent can actually do the writing. The written plan could be posted on the frig or shared with other family members. It’s also something concrete to come back to next week. Parents can take notes on it during the week of things they want to ask you or successes and challenges they experienced. It’s also a great way to track progress. My written plans had a column for the strategy steps, who will implement it, and why it’s important (like what the child will learn from this activity). Simple and very effective.

6. Following-up on the joint plan is absolutely essential – The joint plan provides a bridge for the parent between visits as well as a launching point for the next visit. You should always follow-up at the beginning of the next visit to see how it went, what worked well, and what was challenging. You can problem-solve from there, adjusting the strategy or trying something different. Following up also helps the parent understand her important role in intervention. I heard a parent once say that the plan held her accountable because she knew the therapist would refer back to the plan each time. I actually think the joint plan holds everyone accountable (us too).

Developing a joint plan is a very concrete strategy that you can start using today. It’s one of those techniques that increases the effectiveness of what you do and it only takes a few minutes at the beginning and end of the visit to make such a big difference!

What’s been your experience with using a joint plan with families?

10 comments on “6 Key Ideas for Joint Planning with Parents

  • Caty Nation says:

    Great ideas! I actually use duplicate paper to write joint plans and strategies down. I find it helps the family have a tangible reminders of what we’ve talked about and it helps me remember what issues we have tackled together. It’s so important to remember to empower the family to be the best teacher!

    Reply
    • Love that idea, Caty!That way you both have a record to go back to. I know of another educator who gives the plan to the parent and invites the parent to actually do the writing while they discuss the steps for the plan. That way, the plan is actually in the parent’s own words. Have you ever tried that? I hadn’t but thought it was another great idea.

      Reply
      • Caty Nation says:

        I have not tried that. I think I would rather the parent focus on what I’m doing (I do the session notes at the end). And I worry they might get bogged down in details that don’t really matter in an effort to get “everything”. The duplicate sheets work great and I have even gotten old school therapists to try it! Pay back for all they teach me!

        Reply
  • Pamela Lang says:

    As we switch over to EHR, I have been working even harder to get parents into the habit of consistently writing down their plans. We discuss options (spiral notebook, binder, phone notes, etc-what ever works for them) and although I have met some success, this is a real struggle. I find I get many excuses of why they do not want to do it right then: my phone’s in my husband’s car, I’ll do it right after you leave and she naps, I can’t find that spiral and I want it all in the same book, to even….”I want your notes….couldn’t you just scan them and email them to me once you go EHR?” I realize I need to continue to perfect my skills in setting up the session from the get-go as a time to develop a plan for “you the caregiver.” (As well as from the initial assessment!) With all the components of coaching & primary provider requirements, time goes quickly and now more time is used to foster this involvement & wait for families to get paper, find phones, etc. I’m currently going overtime w/almost every client now. Any thoughts/ suggestions from others?

    Reply
    • I had a simple form that I took to each visit that we used as the intervention plan. It looked like a table with columns for the description of the specific strategy steps, who would do them, when, and what the child would learn. We’d save the last 5-10 min of each visit to discuss the plan and I’d usually record it as we wrote. Parents liked that because I was able to capture the steps as the parent thought it through. I really like the idea of the parent writing it down in his/her own words, but if that’s too problematic, could you capture their words as they talk through the plan?

      Another idea might be to record the parent talking through the plan (as an audio note or a video) using the parent’s phone (if available). Or, take a video during the session while the parent is practicing using the strategy in real time, so he/she has the video clip as a reference point for later. Not exactly a joint plan but close!

      Reply
  • Joyce Sanford says:

    Having a spiral notebook that stays with the family is very helpful. We write the weekly strategies/context/ and targets together during visit; parent writes notes during the week and we discuss at next meeting. The family then also has a diary of progress when child finishes.

    Reply
  • Janice says:

    Hi Dana, Wondering where you work and in what capacity. In our center, we tend to imbed our practice into play activities/daily routines that parents are encouraged to carry-over regularly as part of the child’s home life. Works very well.

    Reply
    • Sure, Janice. I work for the Partnership for People with Disabilities at Virginia Commonwealth University. I’m on our state’s EI professional development team under a project called the Integrated Training Collaborate. Before that, I worked in EI as a child development specialist/educator and a service coordinator doing intervention visits out in families’ homes and in other community locations.

      Do you do joint planning with the parents of children in your center? What does this look like? Do you talk to parents at the end of the day or do you send something home with the child?

      Reply

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