Title: Involving Parents, Improving Language, Making Books: Using Simple Technology
1Involving Parents, Improving Language, Making
Books Using Simple Technology
- Mark S. Innocenti
- Early Intervention Research Institute
- Utah State University
- Logan, UT 84322-5680
Presented at the Division for Early Childhood
Conference October 29, 2008 Minneapolis, MN
2Project Staff not at DECLori Roggman, Lisa
Boyce, Vonda Norman Jump, Eduardo Ortiz, Cora
Price
- Program Partners
- Up to Three, Logan, UT
- Weber/Morgan Early Intervention Program, Ogden,
UT - Centro de La Familia, UT
- Funded by
- U. S. Department of Education, OSERS/OSEP.
- U.S Department of Health and Human Services,
Administration for - Children, Youth, Families.
3For more informationMark.Innocenti_at_usu.edu435-
797-2006This handout will be available at the
websiteEIRI.USU.EDU
4Red Flags Home Visiting Concerns
- Parents leave the room or go in out during a
home visit. - Child races to greet practitioner rummage thru
bag. - Practitioner spends more time on family problems
than on child development. - Practitioner doesnt expect to get much done
when other family members are there. - Practitioner would like to visit the home more
often so the child gets more services.
5Our approach is from two projects based around a
single logic model
- Storytelling for Home Enrichment of Language and
Literacy Skills (SHELLS) - Using Technology to Increase Language and
Literacy (UTELL) - For now, referred to as the ELLs
6What are the ELLs?
- SHELLS and UTELL are
- Curricula
- Based on an approach focused on active parent
engagement - Promotes childrens
- language (oral language) and
- early literacy
- other skills
7How do the ELLs accomplish this?
- Through active engagement of the parent and child
in - Family storytelling
- Parent-child interaction
- Book making activities
8Evidence-Base Oral Language Skills
- Two key skills have been research proven to
increase oral language skills - Dialogic reading (Whitehurst et al., 1994)
- Shared book reading (Neuman, 1996)
- These skills have been supported by
- What Works Clearinghouse
- National Early Literacy Panel (Shanahan, 2007)
9Evidence-Base Oral Language Skills
- Children's and parents personal and situational
interests (McNaughton, 1995) - Informal and formal literacy rich environments in
the childs home using family relevant and
culturally appropriate materials (Dickinson,
1994 Dunst Shue, 2005) - Language and literacy experiences make use of
family routines and responsive parenting
strategies (Cairney, 2003)
10The key issue is how we implement what we know
from the evidence-base!
- Parent engagement in the process is the key!
- Studies demonstrate successful parent involvement
(e.g., dialogic reading, shared book reading) but
how do you maintain parent involvement. - Home visiting literature suggests weak parent
involvement.
11Why do we need new approaches?
- Many types of early intervention rely on parents
- These interventions fail if parents are unengaged
- Parent engagement is challenging (see the red
flags)
12Mission and Key Principles for Providing Early
Intervention Services in Natural Environments
KEY PRINCIPLES 1. Infants and toddlers learn
best through everyday experiences and
interactions with familiar people in familiar
contexts. 2. All families, with the necessary
supports and resources, can enhance their
childrens learning and development. 3. The
primary role of a service provider in early
intervention is to work with and support family
members and caregivers in childrens lives. 4.
The early intervention process, from initial
contacts through transition, must be dynamic and
individualized to reflect the childs and family
members preferences, learning styles and
cultural beliefs.
13Mission and Key Principles for Providing Early
Intervention Services in Natural Environments
KEY PRINCIPLES 5. IFSP outcomes must be
functional and based on childrens and families
needs and family-identified priorities. 6. The
familys priorities, needs and interests are
addressed most appropriately by a primary
provider who represents and receives team and
community support. 7. Interventions with young
children and family members must be based on
explicit principles, validated practices, best
available research, and relevant laws and
regulations.
Workgroup on Principles and Practices in Natural
Environments (November, 2007) Mission and
principles for providing services in natural
environments. OSEP TA Community of Practice-Part
C Settings. http//www.nectac.org/topics/families/
families.asp
14What is Parent Engagement?
Parent engagement in home visits is high when the
parent __ remains engaged throughout visit. __
actively participates in activities. __ asks
questions or provides information related to
topic. __ initiates activities
discussions. __ enjoys home visits.
15Why does parent engagement matter?
ELLs for Parent Engagement
parent engagement
Child Outcomes
Parenting Interactions
Parent Engagement Measures
Parenting Interaction Measures
Child Outcomes Measures
16What is the Theory of Change for ELLs?
- ELLs Process
- Getting parents children talking together.
- Creating meaningful literacy materials.
- Supporting more language literacy.
- Reviewing using regularly.
Parent engagement via book making process
Child development
Parenting Interactions
- Share meaningful talk
- Respond to child
- Print childs words
- Illustrate family stories
- Create individualized,
- meaningful books
- Use strategies books
- afterwards
- More language
- supportive strategies
- Support
- Ask
- Expand
- More shared book
- reading
- Increased language skills
- More spontaneous
- responsive talk
- More use exposure to
- literacy materials
17What are the ELLS objectives?
- What are ELLs activities? Using stories
photographs of parents children to help
families make small books to keep. - Why?
- Increases conversation,
- Increases meaningful literacy materials,
- Increases developmental parenting behavior.
18Goals of the ELLs Book Making Curricula
- To promote shared conversations around meaningful
literacy experiences with toddlers with language
and other delays and their families - To increase awareness and use of everyday
activities for language and literacy development - To use technological supports to promote language
and emergent literacy
19With whom have we worked?
- Children with disabilities in Part C programs
(UTELL) - Children from low-income families who are in
primarily Spanish-speaking homes
20Support for English Language Learners
- What works well for English-speaking children
will also work for Spanish-speaking children. - Language development is a key predictor of school
success. - For low-income children, comprehensive language
skills better predictor for reading than
phonological sensitivity. - Phonological skills show cross-linguistic
transfer. - Several studies have shown that interventions
supporting Latino families efforts to improve
their childrens language and literacy skills can
be effective.
21Who were we working with (UTELL)?
22Who were we working with (UTELL)?
- Six Part C professionals (4 SLPs, 2 EI) delivered
the home visits to UTELL families - Represented staff from 2 programs.
- UTELL families received an average of 2.4
bookmaking home visits over 6 months.
23Who were we working with (SHELLS)?
- Families and children (n68) were enrolled in a
Migrant Head Start program - Low income (mean 1,900/mo)
- Low maternal education (mean grade 8.3)
- All Spanish speakers as primary language
- Mean child age of 41 months (range of 22 to 60
months)
24Who were we working with (SHELLS)?
- Two home visitors provided the SHELLS
intervention - Both were experienced home visitors
- Both were native Spanish speakers
- Served three different migrant sites
- Over 5 months the number of home visits varied by
site - Site 1 Mean 6.3 (4 to 7)
- Site 2 Mean 6.6 (3 to 8)
- Site 3 Mean 2.8 (1 to 5)
25What is the Theory of Change for ELLs?
- ELLs Process
- Getting parents children talking together.
- Creating meaningful literacy materials.
- Supporting more language literacy.
- Reviewing using regularly.
Parent engagement via book making process
- Share meaningful talk
- Respond to child
- Print childs words
- Illustrate family stories
- Create individualized,
- meaningful books
- Use strategies books
- afterwards
26UTELL Results Parent Engagement
- Staff remain positive after 12 months of using
the technology and report high levels of parent
engagement. - I have been able to get parents to work with
their children more on their own. They are
excited to add to the books and show me what they
have done. - The photo books lend themselves to almost any
goal.
27UTELL Result Service Provider Interviews
- Providers indicate that UTELL activities fit into
their current work (4.4 on a 5-point scale). - It works for kidsespecially those with speech
delays. They participate more, talk more, gets
them to point at things and speak, it gets the
family involved - A huge benefit is leaving something concrete and
familiar with the family. Then parents can see
how its related to their goals for their
children and have they have something to work on
when they are on their own.
28UTELL Result Service Provider Interviews
- Providers indicated that families are excited
about making books with their children (4.8 on a
5-point scale). - Families start to see the child really use
books, child says words, child gets more
comprehension skills, and the parent likes that. - By the end, theyve all loved it because their
child likes to look at the books and will talk
more.
29UTELL Results Parent Interview Summary
- Parents enjoyed the bookmaking visits (4.5 on a
5-point scale) - It was funhave memories and I plan something
with the children. Girls love the attention of
the camera. It was fun to see them interacting. - Parents indicated that the home-made books were
helpful for their childrens language development
(4.1 on a 5-point scale). - Because he was the main character of the book.
He was in all of the pictures and was making
the things he liked. He recognizes more words.
30How did we assess engagement in the SHELLS
intervention?
- Home Visitor Log
- Completed after each home visit
- Home Visit Rating Scales
- Observation ratings on 20 of all families
- Parent Satisfaction with Home Visiting
Questionnaire - Completed post-intervention
31What is the Home Visitor Log?
- Completed by home visitor following the visit
- Provides surface information (date of visit, how
long, who was involved, what book was made) - Assesses home visitor perception of parent and
child engagement in home visit activities - 5 questions scored on a 5-point Likert scale
- Requires home visitor to
- Reflect on her behavior to facilitate engagement.
- Provide a plan for the next visit
- Log was reviewed by SHELLS supervisor
32What are the Home Visitor Rating Scales (HOVRS)?
- A measure to describe and evaluate the major
strategies used in home visiting interventions. - Developed by Roggman and colleagues (Roggman et
al., 2001 2006) - 7 scales rated from 1 to 7 with observable
behaviors at anchor points (items 1, 3, 5, 7) - Psychometrically sound
- Inter-rater agreement gt 85, Kappa gt .75
- Scores correlated with home literacy environment
and child language outcomes
33How did the SHELLS home visitors do on the HOVRS
(mean scores)?
34What is the Parent Satisfaction Questionnaire?
- Measure of parent satisfaction with home visitor
and SHELLS activities. - 18 items qualitative quantitative information
- Obtained by independent interviewer after the
last SHELLS home visit
35Were parents satisfied with SHELLS?
36Were parents satisfied with SHELLS (contd)?
- she taught me how to help ltchildgt to express
himself, especially more complex sentences, and
dedicate time to him so he can express with a
more clear language. - I make more questions to my child and then he
answers more about what he thinks. - I like that he has his own book and he knows his
history, he told his dad what he was doing in the
book. - Children learned about our roots, where we were
coming from, and our traditions. - Child gets sharper, and he is more confident to
ask and to talk.
72 of parents report using the books gt 2x week
42 report using the books daily or more often
37What information was provided by our engagement
tools?
- Home Visiting Log
- Verifies the home visit occurred and what
happened during the visit - Useful as a home visitor planning tool
- Home Visitor Observation Rating Scale
- Provides independent quality assessment
- Quality was uniformly high in observed visits
- Parent Satisfaction Questionnaire
- Provides quality indicators from the parent
- If they dont like it, they wont do it
- Satisfaction was high and feedback consistent
with intervention goals
38What is the Theory of Change for ELLs?
- ELLs Process
- Getting parents children talking together.
- Creating meaningful literacy materials.
- Supporting more language literacy.
- Reviewing using regularly.
Parenting Interactions
- More language
- supportive strategies
- Support
- Ask
- Expand
- More shared book
- reading
39UTELL Maternal Language Use Outcomes
- Mothers used significantly more expansions during
book sharing (p .04) - Expansions were positively related to childrens
expressive language (r .41, p .01) - Mothers significantly increased the number of
simple wh questions they asked from pretest to
posttest (p .02). - Open-ended questions were positively related to
childrens expressive (r .43, p .01) and
receptive (r .36, p .03) language scores.
40SHELLS Maternal Language Use Outcomes
- Narrative task
- Increase in eliciting strategies - open-ended
questions, expansions, confirmation, and
conversation (p .04) - Reduction in the number of directives toward
their children (p .05 ) - Book reading task
- No difference for nagging and simple/complex
eliciting
41What is the Theory of Change for ELLs?
- ELLs Process
- Getting parents children talking together.
- Creating meaningful literacy materials.
- Supporting more language literacy.
- Reviewing using regularly.
Child development
- Increased language skills
- More spontaneous
- responsive talk
- More use exposure to
- literacy materials
42UTELL Results Child Language Scores
ES for Change Receptive .37 (p .08)
Expressive -.14 Mean book making visits
2.4!!!
43SHELLS Outcome Measures
- No Statistically Significant Differences
- Home Environment (Language/literacy subscale of
the HOME) - Child Language (PLS-4)
Mean book making visits 4.6!!!
44What is the Theory of Change for ELLs?
- ELLs Process
- Getting parents children talking together.
- Creating meaningful literacy materials.
- Supporting more language literacy.
- Reviewing using regularly.
45Technology Approach
- Digital Cameras are used to
- illustrate family stories
- create individualized books
- encourage meaningful literacy experiences
- engage the family in encouraging childrens
language
46Process Strategies
- Support parent-child conversations by
- encouraging questions about past experiences,
open-ended questions, elaboration by asking for
more information, repeating what the child says,
and talking about what the child wants to talk
about. - referring child to parent, Tell your mom what
that is. - referring parent to child, What does he know
about that? - making use of evidenced-based strategies (i.e.,
Dialogic Reading Strategies) - tailoring strategies to childs developmental
level
47Process Strategies (cont.)
- Create individualized, meaningful books by
- following the parent and childs lead
- taking pictures that they want with the digital
camera - supporting the parent and child in writing and
developing the book (it is their creation, not a
gift from the program)
48Strategies to Elicit and Expand Child
Conversations When Reading the Book
- Support the childs interests, follow childs
lead, engage the child, and take turns - Ask for more information, opinions, feelings, by
using wh questions such as why, where, how, and
who. - Expand on what child says, use new words, bring
in childs experience.
49Example Making a Sandwich
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51Tips
- Not a scrapbook
- Not a communication board
- Tell a story
- Not precious a book to be used by the child
- Align the picture and text like a book
52Creating Meaningful Literacy Materials
- Identify activity in which child goals can be
embedded. - Ask questions that encourage parent-child
conversation around an interesting topic. - Illustrate it by taking photos or drawing
pictures. - Help write words or sentences from parent-child
conversations. - Help organize and put the book together.
- Leave the finished book with the family to keep.
53Conclusions
- Our Book Making approach adds technology to
practices well known and accepted - Natural environments and objects for intervention
- Parent engagement with her child
- Child interest and engagement
- Focus on language and social interaction.
- Results are mixed in our two pilot studies
- The overall process appears solid and can
identify areas for increased emphasis - Our Book Making approach appears to be an
effective way to engage parents in facilitating
childrens language and emergent literacy skills - Works for children with disabilities and at-risk
Latino families
54Making My Favorite Foods
- This is an example of a book in Spanish, made by
SHELLS project families.
55Making My Favorite Food with My Mom and Brother
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65Examples and Research Support for Strategies
- These will be included in our curriculum which is
currently under development.
66Parent Strategy Support - Examples
67Parent Strategy Support Research Rationale
68Parenting Strategy Ask - Examples
69Parent Strategy Ask Research Support
70Parent Strategy Expand - Examples
71Parent Strategy Expand Research Rationale
72Examples from the Home Visitor Observation Scales
For more information on these and our approach to
parent engagement see Roggman, L. A., Boyce, L.
K., Innocenti, M. S. (2008). Developmental
Parenting A Guide for Early Childhood
Practitioners. Baltimore, MD Paul H.
Brookes. Â Roggman, L. A., Cook, G. A., Jump
Norman, V. K., Christiansen, K., Boyce, L. K.,
Innocenti, M. S. (2008). Home Visit Rating
Scales. In L. A. Roggman, L. K. Boyce, and M. S.
Innocenti, Developmental Parenting A Guide for
Early Childhood Practitioners (pp. 209-217).Â
Baltimore Paul H. Brookes.
73What is Parent Engagement?
74Home Visit Rating Scales Curriculum
Implementation
75Home Visit Rating Scale Parent-Child Interaction
76Home Visit Rating Scale Child Engagement