Title: ECMH Consultation: Promising Practices in Preventing Preschool Expulsion
1(No Transcript)
2ECMH Consultation Promising Practices in
Preventing Preschool Expulsion
- Deborah F. Perry, Ph.D.
- Director, Womens and Childrens Health Policy
Center - Johns Hopkins School of Public Health
- September 25, 2006
3Overview
- Review prevalence estimates
- Data from three Maryland models
- Lessons Learned
- Policy Recommendations
4Prevalence of Problem Behaviors
- No national epidemiological data
- Early Childhood Longitudinal Study 10 of all
kindergarten children show problematic behavior - Review of Literature by Qi Kaiser (2003)
- Across 6 studies of Head Start children
externalizing 16-30 internalizing 7-31 - Across 18 studies in low-income community
samples ranges from 8 to 57, depending on
where sample was drawn, risk factors
5Preschool Expulsion Prevalence
- No systematic collection of data on the number of
young children expelled from child care settings
nationally - First published report of statewide data in MA
(Gilliam Sharar, in press) - Sample of 185 randomly selected classrooms in
broad array of child care settings (n119) - 39.3 teachers had expelled at least 1 child,
14.7 suspended at least 1 child in past year - Expulsion rate 27.4 per 1,000 was 34 times K-12
rate
6First National Estimates
- National Pre-kindergarten Study (n3,898)
classroom data from all 52 state-funded pre-K
programs in 40 states - Telephone survey led teacher 50 minutes
- Weighted national average of 6.67 per 1,000
enrolled range 0-24 (KY, NM) - In all but 3 states, preschool expulsion rates
exceeded the K-12 rates (KY, SC, LA) - Differences by age of child, sex, ethnicity,
setting, availability of MH consultation
7Early Childhood Mental Health Consultation
Definition A problem-solving and
capacitybuilding intervention implemented within
a collaborative relationship between a
professional consultant with mental health
expertise and one or more individuals with other
areas of expertise - primarily child care, child
development, and families or individuals with
child care responsibilities. (Cohen Kaufmann,
2000)
8Types of Mental Health Consultation
- Child- or Family- Centered Consultation
- Primary goal is to address the factors that
contribute to an individual childs (and/or
familys) difficulties in functioning well in the
early childhood setting - Develop a plan to address the childs behavior
9Types of Mental Health Consultation
- Programmatic MH Consultation
- Focuses on improving the overall quality of the
program - Assists staff in addressing specific issues that
affect more than one child, family or staff
member - Increases the capacity of staff to respond to the
needs of all young children in their care
10Steps in MH Consultation
- Assessment observation joint examination of
issues, factors, antecedents. - Intervention Selection joint discussion of
effective options match with program approach
and ease of implementation. - Implementation Evaluation opportunities for
support and frequent contact modeling feedback
on issues encountered linkage with families.
11Maryland ECMH Consultation
- Began with Anne Arundel, BEST Project
- Funded two pilot sites using Child Care
Development Block Grant quality improvement
dollars (Baltimore City and 5-county rural region
of Eastern Shore) - Montgomery County locally-funded programmatic
model - Statewide Project ACT, Abilities Network
- Aligned evaluation tools and collecting similar
data
12BEST Program
- Behavioral/Emotional Support and Training
- Assessment and intervention provided to any child
identified as at-risk for expulsion from child
care - Available to all licensed/registered child care
providers in Anne Arundel County, Maryland - Intervention delivered by masters level
behavioral specialists
13BEST Objectives
- Increase appropriate behaviors and positive
interactions - Increase child care providers abilities to
prevent/handle behavior problems - Increase child care providers general skill
levels - Improve services for children and families
14Evaluation Design
- Pre-test/post-test measurement of behavior
problems in children - Rated by parents at baseline using the TABS
(Bagnato, et al., 1999) - Rated by child care providers at baseline and
discharge using the PKBS (Merrell, 1994)
15Improved Social Skills
16Decreased Problem Behavior
17Removed from Child Care
(n135)
18Pilot Sites
- Project Right Steps (PRS)
- Chesapeake Child Care Resource and Referral
Center - Five counties on Eastern Shore
- Early Intervention Project (EIP)
- Baltimore City Child Care Resource Center
- Low Income families in Baltimore
19Common Activities
- On site observation of children and CC staff
- Modeling appropriate child-staff interactions
- Written feedback
- Advice about effective practices for addressing
specific behaviors - Referrals
- Scoring assessment data
- Data input and management
- Meetings with clinical consultants
- Clinical Psychologist
- Developmental Pediatrician
- Training and technical assistance
20Differences in Approach
- Project Right Steps
- Child care environment and home visits
- Greater emphasis on child-specific consultation
- Family rated childrens social emotional
development and behaviors in addition to child
care providers
- Early Intervention Project
- Program-focused model, embed consultants into
specific child care programs for 3-6 months - Child-specific consultation provided on sub-set
of children
21Children Served
22Expulsions
- In each site only 2 children were expelled
- 90 maintained in current child care
- Kids at highest risk
- Some kids were moved by parents on voluntary basis
23Kids at High Risk (1SD)
PKBS Preschool Kindergarten Behavior Scales
scoring more than 1 standard deviation beyond the
mean
24Improved BehaviorsRated by Child Care Providers
Percentage of children 3-5 years old who showed
improvement on PKBS (EIP n42 PRS n73)
25Improved BehaviorsParent Ratings
Infants/Toddlers
BITSEA Brief Infant Toddler Social Emotional
Assessment Competence and Problem Scales (ages
1-3, n12) Ages and Stages Questionnaires Social
Emotional (Parent Ratings, ages 0-5 n68)
26Common Challenges
- Organizational
- Implementation of Plan
- Values
- Stigma
- Lack of qualified staff
- Racial, ethnic and cultural
- Intensive needs
- Sustainability
- Funding
27Lessons Learned
- Consensus on key components of effective
consultation - Logic models and theories of change
- Reliable, valid and relevant tools
- Systematic studies