Coaching in Home Visiting: Supporting Better Outcomes for Professionals and Families

Author:   Christa Haring ,  Angela Rau ,  Mark Innocenti ,  Lori Roggman
Publisher:   Brookes Publishing Co
ISBN:  

9781681257327


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   30 October 2024
Format:   Paperback
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Coaching in Home Visiting: Supporting Better Outcomes for Professionals and Families


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Author:   Christa Haring ,  Angela Rau ,  Mark Innocenti ,  Lori Roggman
Publisher:   Brookes Publishing Co
Imprint:   Brookes Publishing Co
ISBN:  

9781681257327


ISBN 10:   1681257327
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   30 October 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

The table of contents is still being refined, further informed by peer review feedback and the recent edition of contributors Korfman and Allen. What follows is the original proposed TOC, before revision: Coaching in the Home Visiting Space Table of Contents Chapter 1: Introduction to Coaching in the Home Visiting Space Christa Haring Biel, PhD & Angela Rau, M.S. Director of Program Innovations and Professional Development, Parents as Teachers Chapter 2: Applying Partnership Principles in Coaching Home Visitors & Caregivers Jim Knight, PhD, University of Kansas, Director, Kansas Coaching Project Chapter 3: Culturally Responsive Coaching Rihana Mason, PhD, Urban Child Study Center, Georgia State University & Lori Bass, PhD Chapter 4: Reflective Supervision and Coaching Patricia Marickovich, Senior Program Analyst/MIECHV Coordinator, Office of Head Start Chapter 5: Developmental Supervision: Coaching Home Visitors and Families Within a Reflective Process  Mark S. Innocenti, PhD, Professor Emeritus, Utah State University & Lori A. Roggman, PhD, Professor Emeritus, Utah State University Chapter 6: Coaching Caregivers During Early Intervention Mollie Romano, PhD, Assistant Professor, Florida State University Chapter 7: Coaching Home Visitors in Early Head Start Bridget A. Walsh, PhD, Patricia H. Manz, PhD, & Hyun-Joo Jeon Chapter 8: Coaching Family Life Kimberly Allen, Debbie Farr, Margaret Machara Chapter 9: Partnering with Parents Kimberly Menuir & Joseph Sparling, PhD, Professor Emeritus, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapter 10: Effective Feedback Cycles with Families Christa Haring Biel, PhD, Mirza Lugo-Neris, PhD & Rebecca Beegle, M.S. Chapter 11: Coaching home visitors and families through virtual home visitation Dorian E. Traube, PhD, LCSW, USC Suzanne Dworak Peck School of Social Work & Angela Rau, M.S. Director of Program Innovations and Professional Development, Parents as Teachers Chapter 11: Maintaining fidelity during broad dissemination: An example using the SafeCare parenting model Daniel Whitaker, PhD, Distinguished University Professor, Associate Dean for Research and Faculty Affairs, Director of National SafeCare Training and Research Center Chapter 12: Evidence building Jon Korfmacher Chapter 1: Introduction to Coaching in the Home Visiting Space Christa Haring Biel, PhD & Angela Rau, M.S. Director of Program Innovations and Professional Development, Parents as Teachers • History of coaching • Defining the construct of coaching • What does coaching in home visiting look like • How does coaching in home visiting differ from other types/forms of coaching • Review of the literature • Current practice in the field • Ongoing research Chapter 2: Applying Partnership Principles in Coaching Home Visitors & Caregivers Jim Knight, PhD, University of Kansas, Director, Kansas Coaching Project • Equality • Dialogue • Reflection • Praxis • Choice • Voice • Reciprocity Chapter 3: Reflective Supervision and Coaching Patricia Marickovich, Senior Program Analyst/MIECHV Coordinator, Office of Head Start • Reflective Supervision   o Elements   o Promote Staff Development • Coaching   o Elements   o Culture of Coaching • Similarities between Reflective Supervision and Coaching   o Support Staff Development   o Relationship-based   o Strengthen Child and Family Outcomes   o Investing in the Organization’s Human Resource System • Distinctions between Reflective Supervision and Coaching   o Mentor- ProtÉgÉ Relationships in Coaching   o Employee and Supervisors’ Roles to Engage Reflective Supervision Practices      Employee’s self-reflection      Supervisor’s Preparation      Planned Continual Support Chapter 4: Developmental Supervision: Coaching Home Visitors and Families Within a Reflective Process Mark S. Innocenti, PhD, Professor Emeritus, Utah State University & Lori A. Roggman, PhD, Professor Emeritus, Utah State University • Effective coaching is positive, strengths-based, responsive, detailed in feedback, and adapted to the individual, their goals, and their situation. • Coaching in home visiting is unique in that supervisors’ coach practitioners who in turn coach families. • Coaching requires a set of skills that may come naturally to some but can be learned by most, including accurate observation skills, a focus on positive goal-directed behavior, the ability to verbally describe observations in concrete detail, respectful collaboration, enthusiastic encouragement, and support for making small steps toward goals. • Multiple roles in home visiting programs—caregiver, home visitor, supervisor/coach—each have specific requirements about the goals and content of what they are coaching, but the process is so similar that we refer to it as “parallel.” • Parallel process means that the approach home visitors use in their work with parents is parallel to the process supervisors/coaches use with home visitors and also parallel with the approach we hope caregivers will use with babies and young children. • Evidence-based observation tools can guide coaching by indicating which caregiving or supervising interactions occur that link to positive outcomes of home visiting. • A reflective process allows examination of barriers that interfere with successful implementation of practices. • Developmental Supervision implementation will be described. Chapter 5: Coaching Caregivers Using Part C Mollie Romano, PhD, Assistant Professor, Florida State University • Individualized coaching that matches the needs of the adult caregiver's goals, priorities for their child and family, and learning style.   o What makes caregiver coaching in Part C unique?      Individualized (not coaching on a 'curriculum')      Capacity-building and strengths-based      Routines-based- the importance of caregiver-child interactions during everyday family-identified routines as part of coaching within home visits • Use of frameworks for coaching- while coaching should be individualized, we need theoretically grounded, evidence-informed core coaching components within fidelity measures to guide our coaching.   o Early interventionists should incorporate caregiver coaching fidelity measures within their everyday practice.   o Examples of fidelity measures and how they are being used. • Professional development needs for providers learning to use strengths-based coaching approaches in Early Intervention.   o What is the state of current research?   o What are some new and innovative approaches?   o What are some important future directions? Chapter 6: Partnering with Parents Kimberly Menuir & Joseph Sparling, PhD, Professor Emeritus, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • Research shows that using a partnership approach with adult learners creates impactful change • Building an equitable relationship, where both the home visitor and parents benefit • Building shared understanding • Sharing knowledge • Letting the parent lead • Scaffolding for success Chapter 7: Effective Feedback Cycles with Families Christa Haring Biel, PhD, Mirza Lugo-Neris, PhD & Rebecca Beegle, M.S. • Identifying the steps of the feedback cycle used in effective coaching • Coaching conversations that create change • Identifying areas for improvement • Language use in effective feedback • Objective observation • Modeling Chapter 8: Culturally Responsive Coaching Rihana Mason, PhD, Urban Child Study Center, Georgia State University & Lori Bass, PhD • Honoring cultural practices • Co-Creating an intervention plan • Being Sensitive to linguistic differences • Providing Culturally Sensitive Feedback Chapter 9: Coaching home visitors and families through virtual home visitation Dorian E. Traube, PhD, LCSW, USC Suzanne Dworak Peck School of Social Work & Angela Rau, M.S. Director of Program Innovations and Professional Development, Parents as Teachers • Defining what coaching is in virtual environments • Coaching across and array of services • The parallel process of coaching home visitors and families through virtual home visitation • Definition of the parallel process • Promoting the power of the client to be self-directing, self-managing, self-monitoring, self-modifying • There are embedded opportunities for “serve and return” interactions between supervisor and home visitor that can be replicated between home visitor and family • Coaching is the key to reducing home visitor interference in parent child interaction and empowering parents to lead • Steps for prepping home visitors for virtual coaching • Physical setting – background, third space, eye contact • Technological needs • Confidentiality • Steps for prepping families for virtual coaching • Physical setting • Technological needs • Confidentiality • Personal Safety and family choice • Activities to support virtual coaching • Supervision activities • Parent child interaction activities • Goal setting and problem solving with families • Resource Sharing • How virtual coaching can support an array of family support services. • On ground services • Other telehealth services Chapter 10: Coaching Home Visitors in Early Head Start Bridget A. Walsh, PhD, Patricia H. Manz, PhD, & Hyun-Joo Jeon Coaching is distinct but complementary to other professional development approaches. There is a growing evidence-based approach for other fields but deliberate attention to coaching home visitors is lacking. Coaching home visitors must address the reciprocal relationships of wellness and practice. The authors will describe key recommendations from the transdisciplinary coaching research and the nascent literature on coaching home visitors. The authors will underscore key elements from research-based coaching approaches that emphasize wellness and promotion development. Defining features from models, such as Family Life Coaching and Family Life Education (Allen & Huff, 2014; Myers-Walls et al., 2011; Walsh et al., in press, Walsh et al., 2020ab), Reflective Supervision/Consultation (Susman-Stillman et al., 2020; Watson et al., 2014), and Performance-Based Coaching (Krick Oborn & Johnson, 2015; Snyder et al., 2015; Manz et al., 2017) will be underscored. Strategies that are intended to promote home visitor well-being in coaching will be described. Examples of coaching strategies include: • goal setting • empathy • empower • appreciative inquiry • open-ended questions • best possible self- visualization • self-care • self-awareness • self-compassion break • cognitive restructuring Chapter 11: Maintenance of fidelity during broad dissemination: An example using the SafeCare parenting model Daniel Whitaker, PhD, Distinguished University Professor, Associate Dean for Research and Faculty Affairs, Director of National SafeCare Training and Research Center SafeCare is an evidence-based behavioral parenting program used in both preventive settings and by child welfare systems. It has been disseminated in over 30 US states and several non-US countries. A key to successful dissemination of any model is the implementation of processes to ensure fidelity to the model is maintained over time. The National SafeCare Training and Research Center, which disseminates SafeCare, has developed procedures to do this while disseminating SafeCare. This chapter will have several goals: • Briefly describe the SafeCare parenting model and summarize its evidence • Describe the NSTRC’s implementation model for SafeCare • Describe how fidelity to the SafeCare model is measured. This section will include a discussion of fidelity measurement methods and concepts. • Describe processes put into place by NSTRC to facilitate the ongoing assessment of fidelity. This section will include ongoing challenges to fidelity measurement. • Present summary data from years of accruing data on fidelity to the SafeCare model. (note: we are still working on summarizing this data and have a dissertation in progress on it; not 100% sure we will be able to include the data depending on publication issues).

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Author Information

Christa D. Haring, Ph.D., CCC-SLP served as a special educator, speech-language pathologist, and teacher educator for ten years in public schools spurring her interest in identifying ways to measure and improve outcomes for low-performing teachers and students. Currently, she teaches educator preparation courses centered on instructional practices to improve reading skills for students with dyslexia. Her research focuses on language and literacy interventions for parents, teachers, and innovative community programs supporting children from high-poverty areas. Dr. Innocenti is Director of the Research and Evaluation Division at the Center for Persons with Disabilities and Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology at Emma Eccles Jones College of Education and Human Services, Utah State University. Dr. Innocenti has over 30 years of experience working with infants and young children at-risk and with disabilities and their families in multiple research and model demonstration projects. Using an interdisciplinary model that recognizes the contribution of different disciplines and stakeholders, his research is conducted in and for communities. Recent projects focus on assessment and curriculum, home visiting effectiveness, and preschool intervention to prevent later special education. Dr. Roggman is Professor in the Department of Family, Consumer, &Human Development at Emma Eccles Jones College of Education and Human Services, Utah State University. Dr. Roggman's research focuses on parenting and children's early development. She has extensive experience in home visiting research, integrating theory-based inquiry with program evaluation, and training practitioners. She is a strong methodologist with expertise in observational data collection and longitudinal analysis and has authored several observation instruments used extensively by researchers and practitioners. She was principal investigator of a local research team for the national Early Head Start Research and Evaluation Project.

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