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Developments at CEBEI. Bangor University, 20 th January 2012 Professor Judy Hutchings, Director, Centre for Evidence Based Early Intervention, Bangor University. Hot News.
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Developments at CEBEI Bangor University, 20th January 2012 Professor Judy Hutchings, Director, Centre for Evidence Based Early Intervention, Bangor University
Hot News • We are delighted that Dr Helen Henningham has joined us as a Senior Lecturer in the School of Psychology and as co-director of CEBEI • We would like to thank the Children’s Early Intervention Trust Charity (formerly Incredible Years Cymru) for co-funding this post to support the long term development of the Centre
Summary of presentation • Incredible Years work • History of WG funding for IY programmes • Review of WG IY funding for 2011/12 • Future proposals to WG • Leader survey summary of outcomes • Research on the IY programmes • Other work • (Helen’s work in Jamaica) • Africa • Lesotho • KiVa • PREPARE • Other activities supported by the Centre
The Incredible Years Programmes Teacher Programme 6 full day sessions held monthly Child Dinosaur Classroom Programme:3 year curriculum, 2 sessions per week, 30 weeks Child Dinosaur treatment Programme: 6 children, 18 - 22 weekly sessions Fully revised ADVANCED Programme: 9 sessions helping adults communicate & problem solve Fully revised School Aged BASIC Parent Programme: 10 - 12 sessions, 6 - 12 years*** Fully revised Pre-School BASIC Parent Programme: 18 weekly sessions, 3 – 6 years Infant (eight sessions) 0 - 12 months toddler 1 - 2 year olds (13 sessions) programmes School Readiness Programme: 4 pre-school sessions 2 – 4 years ***The School aged programme also has an additional four session unit on helping your child to do their best in school
Development of the programmes in Wales • Initial delivery of parent programme in CAMHS 2000 • Early intervention staff trained 2001 • Teacher and child programmes introduced 2002 • RCT Sure Start research started 2003 • WAG funded support across Wales for the programmes from 2006 following 2005 Parenting Action Plan for Wales recommendation based on early Sure Start findings
Welsh Government IY funding history • WG funding started in 2006/7 • Basic parent leader training for all 22 Ays and supervision 2006/7 & 07/8 • Resources purchased for each Authority • All Authorities accessed the training • Now in its 6th year with a further two years planned
Current situation – Welsh Gov • Funds now provide training in all parent programmes, baby, toddler, pre-school, school aged, school readiness, advanced • Manager and evaluation workshops funded • Parent and teacher books translated • Further resources purchased • Education funded training now includes child and teacher programmes • Conference and newsletter part-funded • Evaluation and research funded
All 22 Authorities in Wales now delivering the parent programme Staff from 21 Authorities trained in TCM and 19 Authorities in Classroom Dino Baby and toddler parent programmes seen as highly relevant to early intervention Flying Start projects School readiness parent programme becoming established, potentially a universal programme 9
WG funding proposal 2012 - 2014 • Parenting – continue basic, school readiness and baby programme leader training • School based work – continue with child and teacher programme training • Supervision - parent, child and teacher work • Support for certification and development of peer coaches • Support for managers and advice on evaluation • Conference and newsletter support
Leader surveys 2004, 2008, 2010 • Enthusiasm from trained people • Good use of training translating into service delivery • All 22 Ays delivering the parent programme (300+/annum, across Wales) maybe 3,000 per annum? but this is still small in relation to the need • Mainly in early intervention services • Leaders still short of resources and time but manager fidelity workshops helping
Parenting Programme: research completed • Welsh Sure Start study: short- and long-term outcomes, outcomes for children at risk of adhd, mediators and moderators of change, maternal depression outcomes, key group leader behaviours • Pathfinder project: parenting 8 – 13 year olds outcomes from six Authorities in England • Toddler Programme: 1 – 2 yos, outcomes • Nursery Staff Toddler Programme: outcomes • Foster Carer: outcomes
Other research studies completed • Pilot Small group Dina therapeutic programme • Pilot classroom Dina in KS1 with 4 – 7 year olds • Pilot TCM with teachers of 4 – 7 yo’s • RCT of TCM with teachers of reception class children 4 – 6 yo’s • Evaluation of a scoring method for the Schedule of Growing Skills (SoGSII)
Current Studies • IY Therapeutic Dino School for children in 23 schools • Development of a measure of peer interactions • Analysis of impact of parental language on emerging child language • IY School Readiness Programme for parents of children as they enrol in school delivered by school staff to build the home-school link • IY Baby Programme for parents and babies • IY parent programme with foster carers • Analysis of data on sex differences in parent report and observation from SS study sample
THe COPPI trial • Partnered with Edmund Sonuga-Barke and colleagues from Southampton University in a head to head trial of IY and New Forest parenting programme with children at risk of ADHD in Nottingham, Stoke, Southampton and Dundee
Other developments at CEBEI • (Helen’s work in Jamaica) • Africa • Lesotho • KiVa • PREPARE • Other activities supported by the Centre
Lesotho • Four visits to Lesotho to support teachers (in alternatives to caning) • Plans to expand this work, preparing an application for lottery funding to bring two teachers to Wales to learn TCM and classroom Dina curriculum • Link with a Lesotho researcher in Capetown university
Southern Africa • Co-applicant with Drs Frances Gardner and Lucie Cluver (Oxford) and Dr Cathy Ward Capetown University for funds to develop a parenting programme for use with carers of HIV affected children to reduce child maltreatment
KiVa bullying prevention programme • Developed by Prof Christina Salmivalli University of Turku, Finland • Funded by Finnish Government • RCT trial 2006-2009 • Ntional roll out since 2009 • Approved for WG funding • Training in May for class teachers and KiVa team • Application for KESS MRes funding to evaluate pilot trials
Background of KiVa: The social architecture of bullying • Participant roles in bullying (Salmivalli et al., 1996) 20% reinforcers of the bully 24% 8% bully outsiders 12% victim 17% assistants of the bully defenders of the victim 7% 21 21
In order to reduce bullying... • Wedonotnecessarilyneed to change the victims, makingthem”lessvulnerable” UNIVERSAL • Influencing the behavior ofclassmatescanreduce the rewardsgainedby the bullies and consequently, theirmotivation to bully in the firstplace However, the victims need to feel that they are heard and helped by the adults at school The bullies need to be confronted for their unacceptable behavior INDICATED 22
KiVa games and KiVa Street are closely connected to student lessons • Repeating & testing of what has been learnt – ”I KNOW” • Learning to take action – ”I CAN” • Motivation – ”I DO” 23
RCT: Success of the indicated actions • The proportion of cases handled by the school team in which bullying... • Stopped completely 79.4% • Decreased 18.5% • Remained the same 1.9% • Increased 0.3% • Garandeau et al., Tackling acute cases of bullying: Comparison of two methods in the context of the KiVa antibullying program. 24
Scaling up • 2009: 1450 schools • 2010: + 810 schools • 2011: + 200 schools + Åland Island • 82% of comprehensive schools in the country have adopted KIVa • About 7500-8000 teachers and other school personnel trained face-to-face 25
Main conclusions (broad rollout) • Effects weaker than in RCT, but still significant (for victimization, OR= 1.21, 95% CI=1.12-1.31), with much variation across grade levels • Again, strongest effects in grade 4 and weakest in secondary school (grades 7-9) • Generalized to Finnish population of 500,000 students, the effects of this size would mean a reduction of 12000 victims and 8000 bullies after nine months of KiVa implementation 26
Other Centre activity • Master’s projects • Go Wales undergraduate and graduate placements • Small scale research projects for DClinPsych students • Advice to services across Wales on evaluation tools • Birmingham Brighter Futures project • Archways Ireland research and service roll out
PREPARE • PhD funding from a philanthropic former student to commence in October 2012 • A web based interactive universal programme to encourage school readiness
Play • Read • Encourage • Praise • Attend or maybe Acknowledge • Reward • Educate
Early Intervention is now better understood • We are making a difference to the lives of children in Wales • The Welsh Government responded because • we chose an evidence based programme • We demonstrated how to make it work in Wales • Our new Centre for Evidence Based Early Intervention enables us to expand our interest and support other programmes with evidence of effectiveness across Wales e.g. KiVa, PATHS
Thank you For further information please email j.hutchings@bangor.ac.uk