Title: Parents and Teachers as Allies
1- Parents and Teachers as Allies
- Partnering with Schools to Improve the Lives of
Students - Living with Mental Illnesses
- Darcy Gruttadaro, Director, NAMI National Child
Adolescent Action Center - Donna Pollard, Program Director Parents and
Teachers as Allies Trainer, NAMI Orange County - Donna Wallis, Executive Director Parents and
Teachers as Allies Trainer, NAMI Orange County
2The Vital Need for Early Identification of Mental
Illnesses
- The overwhelming majority of children and
adolescents with mental illnesses fail to be
identified and linked with services. - There are often tragic and avoidable
consequences. - Many school professionals lack an understanding
of early onset mental illnesses.
3Research Supports Early Identification
- NIMH researchers found that half of all lifetime
cases of mental illness begin by age 14, and that
despite effective treatments, there are long
delays sometimes decades between first onset
of symptoms and when people seek and receive
treatment. Untreated mental illnesses can lead to
a more severe, more difficult to treat illness,
and to the development of co-occurring mental
illnesses. - NIMH Funded Research, Released in June 2005.
4The Role of Schools in Early Identification
- NAMI recognized the tremendous value of having
parents and school professionals working together
as allies - which led to the development of the Parents and
Teachers as Allies publication in 1999 (updated
in 2003).
5Parents and Teachers as Allies
- The PT as Allies publication covers the
following - Keys to early recognition and links to
appropriate evaluation and services (teachers are
never asked to diagnose children or to recommend
medications) - Understanding family reactions to mental
illnesses and guidelines for helping families - Navigating the referral process and linking to
services as allies - Strengthening the alliance between parents and
school professionals and lists resources for both.
6President Bushs NFC Recommends Schools Play a
Bigger Role
- Goal 4 of President Bushs New Freedom Commission
Report on Mental Health, issued in July 2003,
calls for schools to play a larger role in the
early identification of mental health treatment
needs in children and in linking them to
appropriate services. - This is just what NAMIs PT as Allies program
targets.
7The Words of the NFC
- The mission of public schools is to educate all
students. However, children with serious
emotional disturbances have the highest rates of
school failure. Fifty percent of these students
drop out of high school, compared to 30 of all
students with disabilities. Schools are where
children spend most of each day
8The Words of the NFC
-
- While schools are primarily concerned with
education, mental health is essential to learning
as well as to social and emotional development
Schools must be partners in the mental health
care of our children. - NFC Report, 2003
9Why Schools
- Schools are in a unique and key position to
identify mental health concerns early and to link
students with appropriate services. - Strong school mental health programs can help to
address the needs of students, reduce unnecessary
suffering, and help to ensure academic
achievement. - Goal 4 of The Presidents New Freedom Commission
on Mental Health
10The Success of the Publication
- NAMI leaders recognized the value in sharing the
publication with schools and began to use it to
better inform school professionals about early
onset mental illnesses. - Innovative NAMI leaders in a number of states
developed an in-service presentation program
based on the publication.
11The Focus of NAMIs In-Service Program
- Helping schools to better understand the early
warning signs of mental health treatment needs in
students and how best to intervene so that youth
with treatment needs are linked with services.
12The In-Service Early Pilot Program
- The In-Service presentation follows the content
of the PT as Allies publication, with the lived
experience representing a critical component. - The In-Service presentation was launched in
Orange County, FL (12th largest school district
in the country) and has been delivered in
multiple pilot sites in states around the
country, including CA, IL, VA, WA, MN, CT, and
others.
13The In-Service Early Pilot Program
- School professionals give extremely high grades
to the early pilot program. - School professionals often admit feeling ill
equipped to address the needs of these students
and how best to work with families. - NAMI national received a four-year foundation
grant to expand the early pilot program.
14Expansion of the Pilot Program
- The Pilot Program expansion targets public
schools in urban, suburban, rural, and culturally
diverse communities. - NAMI continues to focus on cultural competence in
the program. It will be available in Spanish in
2007-08.
15Expansion of the Pilot Program
- The foundation grant has allowed NAMI to expand
the scope and reach of the program. - Two additional modules added
- Module to instruct grassroots family leaders
about effective outreach to schools - Module to include a presentation on early warning
signs for parents and caregivers and effective
outreach to families within the school community.
16Overview of Parents Teachers as Allies
In-Service Education Program
- Two-hour in-service education program.
- Most schools require school professionals to have
in-service training/education. - The Program includes a team of four presenters
educator/family member, facilitator/F2F teacher,
parent of a child, and consumer that had early
onset MI. - The Publication is provided to all participants.
17Content of the In-Service Program
- Welcome and Introductions
- Lead by Educator/Family Member
- Speaks from personal experience, warms up the
room, connects with the audience as a credible
education professional. - Focuses on stigma and different perspectives we
all have about MI.
18Some Suggestions for Welcome and Introductions
- Make the objectives for the presentation clear,
- Be sure to introduce NAMI to the audience.
- Provide NAMIs definition of mental illness
Mental illnesses are medical conditions that
disrupt a persons thinking, feeling, mood,
ability to relate to others, and daily
functioning. Just as diabetes is a disorder of
the pancreas, mental illnesses are medical
conditions that often result in a diminished
capacity for coping with the ordinary demands of
life.
19Content of the In-Service Program
- Early Warning Signs of Mental Illness
- Lead by Facilitator/Family Member
- Directs group to publication.
- Reviews the early warning signs.
- Reinforces that teachers are not diagnosticians
but can certainly recognize early warning signs
if they know what to look for.
20Suggestions
- We want the audience to become familiar with the
monograph. - We have asked members of the audience to read
portions for a change of pace. - Stress listening to families.
21Content of the In-Service Program
- Family Response Predictable Stages of Emotional
- Reactions Among Family Members
- Lead by Parent/Family Member
- Reviews stages from the publication (pg. 21-22).
- Parent recounts their personal journey with their
child (infusing the lived experience). - Talks about where things are now and steps a
school took that were helpful.
22Content of the In-Service Program
- Living with Mental Illnesses A View from the
Inside - Lead by Consumer
- Consumer shares his/her experiences as a child
living with mental illness. - Focus is on the struggles, especially in school,
teachers that helped, what was harmful, what was
needed and how bad experiences can be turned
around. - Professionals are interested in knowing how to
properly handle classroom circumstances that they
have not been trained to address.
23Living with Mental Illness
- The consumer presentation captures the heart of
the audience. - Just having some understanding of the feelings a
child is experiencing helps teachers cope with
difficult behaviors.
24Content of the In-Service Program
- Group Discussion
- Lead by Educator/Family Member
- Everyone on the presenting team fields questions
from in-service participants. - Presenters are trained to know about the FAQ
(differentiating between bad behavior and early
warning signs, who do I refer a child to, isnt
medicating a child controversial, how does all
this help with classroom management, etc.)
25Content of the In-Service Program
- Closing
- Lead by Facilitator/Family Member
- Thanks participants and those who arranged the
in-service training. - Evaluations for program completed (satisfaction
survey and pre- and post-test). - We have found that school professionals want much
more information (effective behavior
interventions, classroom based EBPs, etc.).
26Effective Outreach to Schools
- Many schools have not engaged in the MH agenda
yet and some resist it. - It may not be a priority for schools.
- School professionals are stretched very thin.
- Many school-based MH professionals are
over-extended, working at multiple schools with
huge case loads and some fail to understand early
onset MI.
27Outreach to Schools
- The key to success is to go in to schools knowing
the challenges that they face. - We see this task as akin to cultural and social
anthropologists we put ourselves in their
shoes. - This program is a beginning to help schools
understand the pressing need to recognize the
early warning signs of mental illnesses and to
link students with services.
28Outreach
- We know that there are many successful ways to
conduct outreach with schools. - An outreach strategy that works wonders in one
district may not work at all in another. - A thread of common importance establish a firm
connection with the targeted school and build a
relationship of trust.
29Outreach
- Some basic suggestions
- Start where you are most likely to succeed
(capitalize on early success, the ripple effect
and benefits of the grapevine). - Find your strongest school-based allies.
- Find your strongest community allies (other
advocacy groups, the PTA, etc.).
30Outreach
- The advantages and dangers of starting at the
top. - Craft your message carefully -- what matters most
to this school? - In our experience, school districts are hungry
for this information but it can be difficult to
make it a priority for them.
31How the Program Fits Within an Overall Advocacy
Agenda
- The education community is key to reaching the
NAMI goal of reducing stigma and discrimination.
Given the early onset of mental illness and the
advantage of early identification we must find
ways to reach educators.
32Our Orange County Experience
- Orange county is a large county with 31 school
districts and 500,000 students. - We have been providing lessons in education
system. - schools for 10 years.
- We have done some teacher in-services before the
present PTasA program. - We have made some friends in the county education
department.
33The Snowball Effect
- Our first presentation after the our training in
- St. Louis was at the Orange County department of
Education which was arranged by a NAMI member
there. Personnel from the Orange county Health
Care Agency attended. - After that meeting five more presentations were
scheduled. - Because county personnel attended, we have been
asked to present at the school nurse convention
in August.
34The Snowball Effect, contd
- From the original five presentations, two more
are scheduled for the future with a couple more
possibilities. - We have been asked to speak at two church groups,
too. - We did another presentation at OCDE in April.
- The more we do, the more we will be asked to do.
35Building Your Team
- Go for the gold!
- Find a well credentialed educator.
- The family member and consumer are key!
- Consumer presenters are the more difficult to
find. - The training day is from 8-5.
- We recommend training at least 3 teams.
- Make sure each team member understands the
requirements.
36Securing Team Commitment
- On training day, determine the role of each
participant. - Stress the importance of meeting before a
presentation to practice. - Each participant needs to come to practice
prepared. - If there is not a program coordinator, one of the
team members needs to be a leader. - Our evaluations have been very motivating to our
teams. (See handout)
37Training Opportunities
- Kingston Jr. High in Kingston WA needed a
presentation for their faculty following two
suicides. We were asked to do this and we asked
to be able to train NAMI WA in the program. This
was financed by a memorial fund for one of the
victims. - We have also gone to San Luis Obispo, CA to train
folks there. - This is an excellent program with the capability
of helping in the prevention and early
intervention of mental illness!
38Comment from Kingston, WA
- Email received from Eric Kvistad, father of
student at Kingston Junior High - I am the one who should be thanking you. This
never would have been possible without you and
Donna helping. My wife and I are gratified this
subject has received so much attention in our
local area. It may be the ray of hope that a
troubled youth needs in order to get help.
39Next Steps
- Our first national train-the-trainers meeting for
this program was held in March 2006 in St. Louis. - NAMI and CHADD leaders from 14 states
participated (CA, CT, FL, ID, IL, MD, TX, MN, MI,
NC, OH, PA, TN, UT). Numerous schools in these
states have received the PTasA Program and
evaluations from these sites are currently being
analyzed to create an evidence base for this
Program. - The expanded program will continue to be rolled
out as additional states become trained during
the next two years of the foundation grant.
40The Roll-Out
- Family advocacy leaders participating in the
program are receiving ongoing technical
assistance from the NAMI national office. - This interaction between the field and NAMI
national provides us with direct feedback on the
programs effectiveness. - The evaluation component of the program allows us
to measure its ongoing success to help ensure
continuous program improvement. - NAMI continues to focus on cultural competence in
the program. It will be available in Spanish in
2007-08.
41NAMI Believes That
- together families, school professionals and
mental health providers can make a tremendous
difference in the lives of children and families. - NAMI is pleased to see so many schools opening
their doors to family advocates working to raise
awareness about early onset mental illnesses. - We look forward to continuing to build our
partnerships and alliances with the school and
mental health advocacy and provider communities.
42Contact Information
- Darcy Gruttadaro
- Director, NAMI Child Adolescent Action Center
- Phone 703.516.0698
- Email darcy_at_nami.org
- Donna Pollard
- Program Director, NAMI Orange County
- Phone 714.544.8488
- Email dpollard_at_namioc.org