EARLY HEARING DETECTION AND INTERVENTION VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
MARCH 2-5, 2021

(Virtually the same conference, without elevators, airplane tickets, or hotel room keys)

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3/06/2012  |   1:45 PM - 2:45 PM   |  What Difference Do They Make? The New Part C Regs and EHDI   |  Grand Ballroom A   |  3

What Difference Do They Make? The New Part C Regs and EHDI

The Part C Regulations for the 2004 IDEA Reauthorization were released in September, 2011. This, coupled with the recent reauthorization of EHDI, make it critically important that EHDI Coordinators understand the Part C program: its changes, priorities, constraints, and collaborative efforts. As a result of this session, participants will be able to describe the changes in the new Part C Regulations that affect the EHDI program. Given the numbers of infants 'lost to follow-up' and EHDI's emphasis on intervention, the session will also focus on the importance of data sharing between the two programs.

  • describe the changes in the new Part C Regulations that affect the EHDI program; describe ways in which the EHDI and Part C programs can better collaborate; and discuss the importance of exchanging data between the EHDI program and Part C.

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Presenters/Authors

Sharon Ringwalt (), Early Childhood Technical Assistance Center, sharon.ringwalt@unc.edu;
Sharon Ringwalt currently serves as a Technical Assistance Specialist at the Early Childhood Technical Assistance (ECTA) Center; State TA Liaison for the IDEA Data Center and as liaison between the Early Hearing Detection and Intervention (EHDI) programs and Part C programs through the Centers for Disease Control and Intervention (CDC). She provides TA to state early intervention and preschool programs around: reporting quality data; developing and implementing effective and efficient accountability and improvement systems to ensure compliance and improve results; and use of implementation science concepts to improve systems and scale up evidence-based/recommended practices to improve results for children and families. Additional areas of expertise comprise: communication development and disorders, including language delays and disorders, early literacy, and newborn hearing screening and intervention; screening, evaluation and assessment of young children, including public awareness and primary referral sources; and, interagency coordination, including State and Local Interagency Coordinating Councils.


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