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Implementing a Primary Coach Approach to Teaming

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Title: Implementing a Primary Coach Approach to Teaming


1
Implementing a Primary Coach Approach to Teaming
  • MLisa Shelden, PT, PhD
  • Family, Infant Preschool Program
  • Morganton, North Carolina
  • Mlisa.shelden_at_ncmail.net
  • Dathan Rush, EdD, CCC-SLP
  • Family, Infant Preschool Program
  • Morganton, North Carolina
  • Dathan.rush_at_ncmail.net
  • http//www.coachinginearlychildhood.org

2
Evidence-Based Paradigm
  • Evidence-Based
  • Promotion
  • Capacity-building
  • Strengths-based
  • Resource-based
  • Family-centered
  • Dunst, 2000

3
(No Transcript)
4
Operational Definition of the Primary Coach
Approach
  • The primary coach approach to teaming is when
    one member of an identified multidisciplinary
    team is selected as the primary coach, receives
    coaching from other team members, and uses
    coaching with parents and other care providers.

5
Characteristics of Primary Coach
  • An identified team of individuals from multiple
    disciplines having expertise in child
    development, family support, and coaching is
    assigned to each family in the program.
  • One team member serves as primary coach to the
    care provider(s).
  • The primary coach receives coaching from other
    team members through ongoing planned and
    spontaneous interactions.

6
Primary Coach Implementation Conditions
  • All therapists and educators on the team must be
    available to serve as a primary coach.

7
Primary Coach Implementation Conditions
  • All team members attend regular team meetings for
    the purpose of colleague-to-colleague coaching.
    Coaching topics at team meetings are varied and
    include specific information for supporting team
    members in their role as a primary coach to the
    families in the program.

8
Team Meeting Guidelines
  • One team member serves as team meeting
    facilitator
  • Announcements are provided in written form and
    not discussed
  • Scheduling occurs at the end of the meeting
  • Families know when/why their primary coach brings
    questions to the team meeting
  • No decisions are made at team meetings without
    parents
  • When families participate, meetings are held at
    convenient times locations for the family

9
Primary Coach Implementation Conditions
  • The primary coach is selected based upon desired
    outcomes of the family, rapport/relationship
    between coach and learner, and knowledge and
    availability of the coach and family.

10
Primary Coach Implementation Conditions
  • Joint visits should occur at the same place and
    time whenever possible with/by other team members
    to support the primary coach.

11
Primary Coach Implementation Conditions
  • The primary coach for a family should change as
    infrequently as possible. Justifiable reasons for
    changing the primary coach include a request by a
    family member or other care provider or when a
    primary coach believes that even with coaching
    from other team members he or she is ineffective
    in supporting the care providers.

12
Implementation Tools
  • Primary Coach Rating Scale
  • Team Meeting Agenda format
  • Team Meeting Minutes format
  • http//www.coachinginearlychildhood.org
  • http//www.fippcase.org

13
Characteristics of Teaming
  • Teams should consist of individuals who
  • are agreeable
  • are conscientious
  • have high general mental ability
  • are competent in their area of expertise
  • are high in openness to experience and mental
    stability
  • like teamwork
  • have been with the organization long enough to be
    socialized
  • (Bell, 2004) (cont.)

14
Characteristics of Teaming
  • Team task(s) should allow members to use a
    variety of skills (Bell, 2004)
  • Team task(s) should result in meaningful work
    (Bell, 2004)
  • Teams work should have significant consequences
    for other people (Bell, 2004)
  • Team should generate feedback about how the team
    is performing (Bell, 2004)
  • Number of team members should be appropriate for
    the task (Bell, 2004 Larsson, 2000)
  • Teams should have some degree of self-managing
    abilities (Bell, 2004)
  • Teams should have a common planning time
    (Flowers, Mertens, Mulhall, 1999)

15
Strategies for Establishing a Team
  • A team must consist of a team leader and the
    equivalent of at least one FTE from the following
    roles special educator/early childhood educator,
    occupational therapist, physical therapist,
    speech-language pathologist, service coordinator
    (in a dedicated SC model). All roles must be
    represented.

16
Strategies for Establishing a Team
  • Team members may also include dietitian, nurse,
    orientation and mobility specialist, teachers of
    children with vision or hearing impairments,
    psychologist, social worker.

17
Strategies for Establishing a Team
  • Team Load (number of families)
  • Dedicated service coordination model
  • Service coordinators 3 _at_ 30-35 per SC
  • ECSE, OT, PT, SLP 25 families per discipline
    per FTE (full-time equivalent position)
  • Blended service coordination role
  • ECSE, OT, PT, SLP 15 families per discipline
    per FTE (minimum)

18
Strategies for Establishing a Team
  • Determine distribution of eligible families
    across catchment area
  • Identify the area the team is to cover (i.e.,
    counties, zip codes, school districts) based on
    family distribution
  • Determine the number of teams necessary to cover
    the catchment area
  • Assign available practitioners to teams beginning
    with those who can give the most time to the
    program
  • Develop mechanism to pay for team meeting time

19
Moving to a Primary Coach Approach
  • Two opportunities
  • Newly referred children and families
  • 2. Currently served children and families

20
Newly Referred Children
  • 1. During the initial conversation with family
    members and care providers identify activity
    settings, child interests, and family priorities
    in order to determine the expertise necessary for
    the assessment.
  • 2. Conduct assessment across activity settings to
    identify the supports necessary to promote the
    childs participation.

21
Newly Referred Children
  • 3. Develop functional, discipline-free
    participation-based IFSP outcomes to reflect
    childs interests and care providers priorities.
  • 4. Select primary coach and determine frequency,
    intensity, and duration of supports based on the
  • best match between coach and learner expertise
  • availability of necessary coaching to
  • achieve IFSP outcomes as quickly as possible.

22
Currently Served Children
  • Identify families who have expressed interest in
    this type of an approach or frustration with
    having multiple practitioners.
  • Review all team members caseloads to identify
    overlaps among other families in the area.
  • Select a few children who have the most overlaps
    and discuss with care providers implementing the
    new approach for a trial period.

23
Currently Served Children
  • 4. Conduct an IFSP review to ensure the outcomes
    are
  • participation-based
  • discipline-free
  • functional/contextualized (i.e., not impairment
    oriented), and
  • based on care providers priorities and childs
    interests.

24
Currently Served Children
  • 5. Select primary coach and determine frequency,
    intensity, and duration of supports based on the
  • best match between coach and learner expertise
  • availability of necessary coaching to
  • achieve IFSP outcomes as quickly as possible.

25
Implementation Data
  • Matched Sample Study (Shelden Rush, 2006)
  • Experimental design
  • 21 matched pairs
  • Controls were child age at entry into study,
    child diagnosis, length of time served by
    program, simultaneous participation in program,
    family SES
  • Diagnoses included developmental delay, seizure
    disorder, cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, visual
    impairment, severe disabilities, autism/PDD
  • Shelden Rush, in preparation

26
Implementation Data
  • Matched Sample Study cont.
  • Mean age at entry
  • Experimental 11.9 months
  • Control 12.4 months
  • Mean age at exit
  • Experimental 19.7 months
  • Control 21.9 months
  • Data collected (both groups) all developmental
    testing, IFSPs, actual billed units for all IFSP
    services, (experimental group only) team meeting
    minutes, team meeting time by child per team
    member, documentation of joint visits, coaching
    logs
  • Shelden Rush, in preparation

27
Implementation Data
  • Matched Sample Study cont.
  • Results
  • Experimental group had significantly fewer
    service hours including team meeting time than
    control group
  • IFSP outcomes were met more often by children in
    experimental group
  • IFSP outcomes were more participation based and
    care provider focused for children in the
    experimental group
  • Shelden Rush, in preparation

28
Implementation Data
  • Matched Sample Study cont.
  • Results
  • No differences noted between the experimental and
    control group for child developmental outcome
    data
  • Early intervention services and supports provided
    using the evidence-based practice model were
    significantly less expensive and of higher
    quality as defined by current research than those
    services provided outside of this model
  • Shelden Rush, in preparation

29
What Happens
  • From clinic-based, segregated, decontextualized
    environments to natural learning environments
  • From no teams to dedicated regional teams
  • From no regular contact among practitioners to
    weekly team meetings, joint visits, and ongoing
    interactions (i.e., phone calls, email)
  • From limited insight and speculation to actual
    administrative knowledge of practices occurring
    during visits

30
What Happens
  • From individual practitioner responsibility for
    use of evidence-based practices to team and
    program accountability
  • From limited services to access to a full team of
    practitioners from a variety of disciplines
  • From hierarchical view of roles to equality among
    team members

31
What We Know
  • Team Meetings
  • Teams that meet weekly learn and implement the
    practices
  • Teams that meet weekly have higher accountability
    among team members
  • Teams meet on average less than 1 ½ hours per
    week
  • When coaching occurs at team meetings, the
    practices are implemented
  • Meetings are more productive when guided by a
    competent, consistent facilitator
  • All team members attend the team meetings
  • The order in which items occur on the agenda
    matters
  • Dedicated service coordinators love team meetings

32
What We Know
  • Early Intervention Process
  • Same team should support families from initial
    referral through transition
  • Joint Visits
  • 15-20 of total visits are joint visits
  • Disciplines other than core, may require more
    joint visits
  • Three steps are required for joint visits to be
    effective
  • Changes in Primary Coach
  • Primary coaches do not change frequently

33
What We Know
  • Time
  • Moving to a primary coach approach takes
    intensive support over time
  • Leadership
  • Administrative support for use of the approach is
    essential
  • Program administrators must attend at least some
    team meetings
  • Service Coordination
  • Primary coach works with any time of service
    coordination model

34
What We Are Learning
  • Team load
  • Frequency and duration of team meetings
  • Amount of time spent in team meetings per
    practitioner per child
  • How to decrease the amount of time required to
    learn and implement the practices
  • Comparison in cost of primary coach approach and
    traditional model
  • Outcomes for families
  • Outcomes for children

35
Family Feedback
  • I sought and I found the perfect program for my
    daughter. There was no hit and miss. I am very
    pleased that my first program for my daughter was
    ___ because this team that was sent to us comes
    second to none. My team has given our family so
    much, much more than I ever expected.

36
Family Feedback
  • I love working with my team!
  • This is a wonderful program. Because of
    participation in the pilot program, my child is
    now able to tell us what he wants rather than
    pointing.
  • Our son has grown more rapidly as a result of
    our involvement.
  • The program has helped my daughter and also
    helped myself and her father.

37
Family Feedback
  • A team leader and sole service provider has
    been sufficient in meeting the needs of our son.
    The team leader/coach has been willing to consult
    with other therapists and then report back to us.
    She has been knowledgeable and skilled in the
    areas of need.

38
Family Feedback
  • July 5th will surely be a sad day in our
    housethe team will be gone, but not the
    wonderful teaching tools, advice, and early
    intervention knowledge that they have shared with
    us throughout our time together. My team
    deserves much recognition (and a really big
    raise.?) for helping us to bring (childs name)
    back to us. We love our team!

39
Family Feedback
  • My family has been very pleased with the
    service we have been receiving on behalf of our
    daughter. Our service provider has presented
    herself to be very professional and extremely
    knowledgeable. Whenever we have questions
    pertaining to other areas of therapy, our service
    provider never fails to consult with the team and
    return with an answer. We are very pleased with
    the coaching method and are pleased to say it is
    working extremely well for our family. Thank you.

40
Family Feedback
  • I have a foundation to build on that the team
    has helped to establish in order for us to work
    towards even more improvements with (my child),
    and every goal we had set has been matched to
    great satisfaction. I have no questions or
    concerns at this point, just some well deserved
    words of praise to my team for helping me to find
    my baby girl in the dark hole that held her
    prisoner.

41
Questions Discussion
42
References
  • Bell, S.T. (2004). Setting the stage for
    effective teams A meta-analysis of team design
    variables and team effectiveness. Unpublished
    doctoral dissertation, Texas A M University,
    College Station, Tx.
  • Dunst, C. J. (2000). Revisiting "Rethinking early
    intervention." Topics in Early Childhood Special
    Education, 20, 95-104.
  • Flowers, N., Mertens, S.B., Mulhall, P. (1999).
    The impact of teaming Five research-based
    outcomes of teaming. Middle School Journal,
    31(1), 57-60.
  • Larsson, M. (2000). Organising habilitation
    services Team structures and family
    participation. Child Care, Health Development,
    26, 501-514.
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