1 / 12

Developing a Belonging Strategy Thunder Bay District Best Start Service Integration Committee

Developing a Belonging Strategy Thunder Bay District Best Start Service Integration Committee. Membership of Service Integration Committee. Public Health (Preschool Speech & Language; Children’s Clinical Programs; HBHC; Screening (Fair Start); Child Welfare (CAS; Dilico);

tory
Download Presentation

Developing a Belonging Strategy Thunder Bay District Best Start Service Integration Committee

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Developing a Belonging Strategy Thunder Bay District Best Start Service Integration Committee

  2. Membership of Service Integration Committee Public Health (Preschool Speech & Language; Children’s Clinical Programs; HBHC; Screening (Fair Start); Child Welfare (CAS; Dilico); Children’s Mental Health (CCTB; Dilico; NOSP); Parenting Support (OKC; Triple P); Child Care Resources (SNRP; Child Care Supervisors;)

  3. Terms of Reference • Purpose: • To bring together service providers identified in • Ontario’s Best Start Vision for the purpose of collaborative • planning for seamless and integrated services to children. • Responsibilities of Committee Members: • To think broadly about the needs of children and families in our community • To bring observed inequities in access to services to the attention of the committee • To actively pursue solutions to ensure that services are reaching the people who need them most

  4. Background • Recurring theme: Families who would benefit are not accessing services; or “how to engage ‘hard-to-reach’ families” • June, 2010 – Facilitated meeting of Service Providers, Hub Coordinators, and invited guests to discuss “What do we know are effective strategies to engage families?” • Tried to keep it positive – did not focus on barriers but rather on what works

  5. What People Told Us: • Create safety • Be inviting • Meet family needs • Stay engaged • Sense of belonging/membership

  6. In Short… • Families find ways to overcome barriers when there is trust, relationships, and when they feel welcome. • When people feel a sense of “belonging” or membership…. whether in a family, a group, or a community, they feel ownership and a pull to participation.

  7. What the Research Says: • Workers in effective programs use specific relational skills to recreate a nurturing family environment that fosters parent engagement (Gockel, Russell, Harris, 2008). • Parents attend more sessions, remain longer in programs, and participate more actively when their group leader came from a comparable SES background (Dumas, Moreland, Gitter, Pearl, Nordstrom, 2008). • Australian study examining factors that influence parent motivation and engagement in parenting programs found that payment (or incentives) were found to be a significant factor in recruitment and engagement of “high risk” parents; program design was not (Heinrichs, 2008).

  8. Creating “The Belonging Strategy” P NP S ASK Identify Key Themes LISTEN Feedback to LSSMT CALL TO ACTION Design VAT Train the Trainer Modules CONSOLIDATE Training to City Trainers Training to District Trainers Training to Other Trainers DELIVER Agency Training Agency Training Agency Training Agency Training Agency Training Agency Training

  9. How Will It Be Sustained? Short Term: Annual meeting for trainers and EDs for feedback and support; Feedback to be compiled by Best Start Evaluation Committee and presented to Service Integration Committee or LSSMT or both for action; Assumed that training will likely be modified and offered every three years or so to ensure it remains viable. Long Term: Funding agreements with MCYS will include deliverables related to Values Awareness Training being delivered and acted upon.

  10. Sustaining the Belonging Strategy Agency A Trainers & ED Agency B Trainers & ED Agency C Trainers & ED Agency D Trainers & ED Agency E Trainers & ED Feedback Session – Best Start Evaluation Committee, January, 2013 Evaluation Committee Report with Recommendations to Service Integration Committee and Best Start Network Best Start Workplan 2013 incorporates training recommendations for 2014 MCYS Deliverables?

  11. How Will We Know It’s Working? Staff in agencies will be aware of their own values and how they affect their basic beliefs about people and communities. Agencies will be aware of their policies and practices that promote diversity and support “belonging” and those that promote uniformity of approach and may be preventing “belonging”. Agencies will review and revise their policies and procedures to ensure that hiring practices reflect diversity that is appropriate to the client group they aim to serve. Agencies will ensure all new staff receive Values Awareness Training and are able to demonstrate an understanding of the implications.

  12. Questions?

More Related