Baby face qualitative Evaluation
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ParentsAsTeachers BabyFACE QualEvaluationReport 1-15
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Home visits
- Successes Activities and handouts
Baby FACE Wilder Research, January 2015 Qualitative Evaluation 18 Program implementation Implementation of the Baby FACE program involves four main components: 1) home visits using the Parents as Teachers curriculum, 2) health and developmental screenings for the children, 3) group meetings and events, and 4) referrals for resources and services. Home visits Bi-weekly visits are scheduled with families. Parent educators partner with parents, and other caregivers, to help them to be the first and most important teachers of their children. Each visit includes: age-specific information about parenting issues and child development, and an educational activity between the parent and the child that is often adapted to emphasize the local culture and language. Each month families receive high-quality age-appropriate children’s books and tips on using them effectively. Successes Activities and handouts The biggest success of the home visits, mentioned frequently by both parent educators and parents, was engaging parents and children in the activities. Parent educators (21) noted how much parents liked doing the activities and especially being able to create toys and activities from items they already had in their homes. The activities were often what kept parents engaged and participating in the program. [Parents] like doing the activities. Like what they can do with a paper bag, just things around their home, to make toys for their child. The activities are really fun for the kids. The parents I work with seem to enjoy doing the activities with the kids. The handouts just fit that visit each and every time. It is a very resourceful curriculum. And there are the multi-age activities. There is a lot of choice as far as the activities. The books kind of go along with the activities, and we share those at the same time. Everything flows together. And I like thinking of the different ways to do things. There are forms for you to include your own ideas. That made me feel that my ideas mattered, with forms to use for that. I don’t have to re-generate or create - it is all there. Parents in six focus groups echoed these sentiments. They appreciated the activities, especially that most of them could be done with inexpensive or homemade items. The things [parent educator] brought over, toys are expensive, but we could make Playdoh from our house. Using our wipe box, she used that as a tool for fine motor skills - learning to open it. Just simple activities that we can do at home - that helps. |
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