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You Said What?!? Practical Communication Strategies. Teresa Mebane Matt Oakley Debbie Stout August 18, 2014. GPP (Group Presentation Plan not to be confused with IEP). Welcome/Introductions Deb Overview Deb Clip Meetings and more Matt Parents Point of View Teresa
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You Said What?!?Practical Communication Strategies Teresa Mebane Matt Oakley Debbie Stout August 18, 2014
GPP (Group Presentation Plan not to be confused with IEP) • Welcome/Introductions Deb • Overview Deb • Clip • Meetings and more Matt • Parents Point of View Teresa • Questions(if time) Deb
Overview https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWNYnVFL2Cc ?
Pre-meeting • As a team… * When are they necessary * What should be discussed/What should NOT be discussed * Between the team and family • What we can do to ease anxieties and be transparent
Meetings/Follow-up • Meetings/Follow-up *Roles of the team *Use of Jargon *Ongoing communication with families - Team building
Non-verbal Communication • Importance of the meeting - for professionals and for families • What we communicate with families - body language, texting, engaged listening • What families are non-verbally communicating with us Posture Supports Attendance
What the Parent Brings to the Relationship • Changes after the diagnosis • Day to day life • Dreams • Priorities • Relationships • The way they think of themselves and their child
What the Parent Brings to the Relationship • Fear • Sadness • Inadequacy • Guilt • Protectiveness • Confusion • Isolation • Hopefulness • Anger
What the Parent Brings to the Relationship • Past history with professionals • Negative experiences-misdiagnosis, rejection, rejection of child • Positive experiences- “savior” at critical time • Physical impact of parenting • Sleep deprivation and physical exhaustion • No time to relax, always on alert • Cumulative effect of stress • Parents own physical/mental health issues
PERCEPTIONS • Parents can’t be objective • Parents are overprotective • Professionals not understanding the uniqueness of each student • Too little communication between school and home • Not taking the parent’s fears seriously • Not being listened to
PERCEPTIONS • Professionals not understanding the relationship of child behavior to the disability • Feeling outnumbered at meetings • Use of negative body language during meetings- eye rolling, closed body posture, clock watching • Feeling patronized
Prevent Problems by… • Getting to know the family • Step into the family’s world • Ask about family’s experience with the “system” • Put family behavior in context • Use information you learn to prevent problems and set goals • Connect the family with resources • Listen
Prevent Problems by… • Develop a foundation of trust • Show that you see the individual, not just the diagnosis • Help parents appreciate their strengths • Keep family information confidential • Respect professional/parent boundaries • Accept that conflicts are inevitable • Don’t take parent behavior personally
US • Teresa Mebane Family Support Network fsnsoutheastern@gmail.com • Matthew Oakley Preschool Specialist matther.oakly@nhcs.net • Debbie Stout Special Education Liaison deborah.stout@nhcs.net
THANKS!! Have a wonderful year and we appreciate YOU!!