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Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

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Page 1: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back!

Marla GarstkaMichelle Clyne

IAER 2015

Page 2: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Brought to you by…

Page 3: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Today we hope to

• Discuss reasons use of a toy bag should be thought about carefully for each family served

• Learn/review recommended practices that support family confidence and child outcomes when used during home-based early intervention sessions

• Participate in small group role playing of discussions one might have with families unused to a coaching-based family-driven intervention model

Page 4: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Division of Early Childhood Recommended Practices for EI/EC

• E1. Practitioners provide services and supports in natural and inclusive environments during daily routines and activities to promote the child’s access to and participation in learning experiences.

• F6. Practitioners engage the family in opportunities that support and strengthen parenting knowledge and skills and parenting competence and confidence in ways that are flexible, individualized, and tailored to the family’s preferences.

Page 5: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Division of Early Childhood Recommended Practices for EI/EC

• INS5. Practitioners embed instruction within and across routines, activities, and environments to provide contextually relevant learning opportunities.

• INS13. Practitioners use coaching or consultation strategies with primary caregivers or other adults to facilitate positive adult-child interactions and instruction intentionally designed to promote child learning and development.

http://www.dec-sped.org/recommendedpractices

Page 6: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Article in your Handouts

Blog: Problems with the Toy Bag:

Robin McWilliamhttp://naturalenvironments.blogspot.com/2007/10/toy-bags.htmlrelated to

Page 7: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Toy Bag Realities

Working from the bag implies that the one hour a week between the visitor and the child is the intervention

Adults are better equipped to learn from a one hour weekly session and use that information for the rest of the week.

Page 8: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Toy Bag Realities

The toy bag implies that what the family has is inadequate

Home visits should be about reinforcing the family’s feelings of competence

Page 9: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Toy Bag Realities

If the toys in the bag are so important to the child’s development, why are they removed from the home at the end of the hour?

Home visits should prepare the family to provide the real intervention during regular routines throughout the child’s entire day, week, and month.

Page 10: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Toy Bag Realities

Toy bag play tends to be 80% adult/child/toy interaction.

In real life, most families spend little time with adult/child/toy interactions during daily routines (5-15%)

Page 11: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Marla’s Story

In the Beginning Later on (but we won’t say how much later…)

Page 12: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Marla spoke with her families

• Mixed group of about 15 families

• Asked open-ended questions about what they thought about toys coming into the home

Page 13: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

And the survey said….

• All of them LIKED the toys she brought• She brought toys that were new, and they

liked seeing something new• They felt kids were getting new skills, or a new

angle on a previous skill• They felt it was something a DT-Vision would

bring in as opposed to another early interventionist

Page 14: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Back to the Blog

• When Robin posted his article, there were MANY responses, both some that agreed and some that disagreed.

• Some were from newcomers to the field, some from people with many years of experience.

• Here are some examples.

Page 15: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Mary said...

I have often had to "wean" families off of the toy bag expectation. I use this as an opportunity to talk about meaningful learning opportunities (daily routines) and help them support their child with those- … asking questions about "What they notice when..." and, among many other things, adapting an interaction, (or how a toy or other household material may be utilized) to make growth toward outcomes. I have never had a family (after two or three "weaning sessions") ask for the toy bag- they usually are too delighted in the increased competence, engagement and/or participation on the part of the child and an increase in their confidence in supporting their child.

Page 16: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Sonia Pina said...

I'm currently doing my student teaching and I have found that bags are fun for children. The EI usually takes a bag for children and leaves it for at least a month. I work with some families that don't have many resources to buy toys or need assistance in finding adequate toys. I think that this is a good use of toy bags.

Page 17: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Steven said...

Wow, someone really has strong feelings about NOT BRINGING TOYS to a home visit. I agree with some of what was said. However, in the beginning I do not see anything wrong with bringing a few toys to help break the ice with the child you are seeing in the house. In addition, I would think that you could use the toys to help provide service to the child and to model for the family on how they can play and teach the child. Then, you can slowly fade the toys away.

Page 18: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Lisa Henggeler said...

• Maybe we could meet in the middle!!! Although my experience is in a center based program, is it possible to expose the child to both teacher provided toys and home toys and let the child decide? Don't we take our lead from the child? If the child's preference is the teachers, perhaps the teacher could leave it at the home for a short period of time.

Page 19: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Sarah said...

• I see do see the points you are making however I feel most of us cannot go from bringing toy bags to not having them at all. It is a little discouraging to read the blog, maybe we as professionals need some more ideas on how transition to no bags or have a happy medium. I feel there needs to be more discussion on the in between areas. I feel there is room for bags and no bags.

Page 20: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Why Do We Love the Toy Bag?

• Curriculum• Resources• Skills• Lesson Planning• Assessment (ongoing)

Page 21: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Does the Bag become the Focus of the Intervention?

• Do the children play with toys at the expense of opportunities for interaction?

• Do we not take advantage of opportunities for natural routines?

• Are parent questions about other situations not answered within those situations?

• Are you relegated to the “nicest” room in the house, where the toy bag lands, instead of the rooms where real life happens?

Page 22: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Transition Ideas – Let’s Build this Together• Start with a New Family

Page 23: Get The Toy Bag Monkey Off You Back! Marla Garstka Michelle Clyne IAER 2015

Questions? And Evals