EARLY HEARING DETECTION AND INTERVENTION VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
MARCH 2-5, 2021
(Virtually the same conference, without elevators, airplane tickets, or hotel room keys)
3/09/2015 | 2:00 PM - 2:30 PM | Bringing the Parent-Child Relationship Lens to Our Work Using the Early Relational Assessment | Combs Chandler | 4
Bringing the Parent-Child Relationship Lens to Our Work Using the Early Relational Assessment
“Understanding child-parent attachment must become a lens through which we consider all decisions that touch the lives of children. This is not a political issue; it is a universal human issue” (M. Erickson, 2010). EHDI programs touch the lives of children during critical times when parent-child attachment is developing. While early intervention efforts have begun to focus more on social-emotional development along with communication and general development, the context of the child’s primary relationship is still missing. Wisconsin Sound Beginnings has been using the Parent-Child Early Relational Assessment (R. Clark, 2010) to evaluate the parent-child relationship for children who have been identified as deaf or hard of hearing. The Parent-Child Early Relational Assessment (ERA) is comprised of three, five-minute video segments of parents and children--a free play; a structured task; and a snack time/feeding. WSB analyzes and scores the videos per the ERA protocol, looking at more than 60 aspects of the parent-child interaction, evaluating the child’s experience of the parent, the parent’s experience of the child and their interaction together. WSB has had the opportunity to conduct and analyze the ERAs for approximately 10 families. Despite the small sample size, several trends have emerged. This presentation seeks to demonstrate the importance of child-parent attachment as a factor in child development and to increase participants’ capacity to observe parent-child interactions through the lens of attachment.
- describe emerging trends in Wisconsin’s ERA preliminary data
- explain why looking at the parent-child relationship is important
Presentation:
This presentation has not yet been uploaded.
Handouts:
Handout is not Available
Transcripts:
CART transcripts are NOT YET available, but will be posted shortly after the conference
Presenters/Authors
Rebecca Martin
(Primary Presenter,POC), WI DHS, rebecca.martin@wi.gov;
Rebecca Martin, MPH, IMH-E(II) is the Outreach Specialist Coordinator at Wisconsin Sound Beginnings, working to support families and providers throughout EHDI. She has a decade of experience in health education, home visitation, case management, communications and advocacy. With a focus on high-risk, minority, immigrant and teen parents and their young children, Rebecca has provided intensive case management, intervention, education and support around parent-child relationships, child development, family stability, domestic violence and physical/emotional health. Rebecca completed her public health Preceptorship at a community health center in rural Wisconsin working with Amish and Hispanic communities. Rebecca served as a Peace Corps Volunteer, working to better maternal/child health and improve community organization. She is a graduate of UW-Madison’s Infant, Early Childhood and Family Mental Health certificate program and has earned her Level II Infant Mental Health Endorsement as an Infant Family Specialist for culturally sensitive, relationship-focused practice promoting infant mental health.
ASHA DISCLOSURE:
Financial -
Nonfinancial -