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Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools Involved Parents, Schools and Community and Community Organizations in Creating Organizations in Creating a System of Care for a System of Care for Children Children

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Page 1: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Involved Parents, Schools and Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating Community Organizations in Creating

a System of Care for Childrena System of Care for Children

Page 2: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

AGENDA

What is a System of Care? General Concept/Value: Parent

Empowerment Overview of program Experiential How to implement the FAST

program The story of LaGrange Middle

School, Illinois Outcomes

Page 3: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

What is a System of Care?

Page 4: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

System of Care

Page 5: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

What is a System of Care?

Systems of care is not a program — it is a philosophy of how care should be delivered.  Systems of Care is an approach to services that recognizes the importance of family, school and community, and seeks to promote the full potential of every child and youth by addressing their physical, emotional, intellectual, cultural and social needs

systemsofcare.samhsa.gov

Page 6: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

What is a System of Care?

Systems of Care is a service delivery approach that builds partnerships to create a broad, integrated process for meeting families' multiple needs. This approach is based on the principles of interagency collaboration; individualized, strengths-based care practices; cultural competence; community-based services; and full participation of families at all levels of the system. A centralized focus of Systems of Care is building the infrastructure needed to result in positive outcomes for children, youth, and families.

A system of care is a coordinated network of community-based services and supports that are organized to

meet the challenges of children and youth with mental health needs and their families. Families and youth work in partnership with public and private organizations to design mental health services and supports that are effective, that build on the strengths of individuals, and that address each person's cultural and linguistic needs. A system of care helps children, youth and families function better at home, in school, in the community and throughout life.

Page 7: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Creating a Systems of Care

Need a Frame Work Need a Structure Need Training Need Defined Roles &

responsabilities

Page 8: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Exercise Systems of Care

• Think, Pair, Share Exercise Think:

• Think about what systems of care means. Write down one or two examples that illustrate empowerment.

Pair:• Pair up with a person at your table.

Share: • Share your examples and definition of

systems of care with your partner. Then select a spokes person for the group who will share your thoughts and ideas with the group.

Page 9: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

What is EMPOWERMENT?

Page 10: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Exercise Empowerment

• Think, Pair, Share Exercise Think:

• Think about what empowerment means. Write down one or two examples that illustrate empowerment.

Share: • Share your examples and definition of

empowerment with your partner. Then be prepared to share your thoughts and ideas with the group.

Page 11: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Empowerment is the process that is essential to activate people’s

capacity to satisfy their own needs, solve their own

problems, and acquire the necessary resources to take

control over their life.

(from S. Talseth, 1997)

Page 12: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Parents

& Youth

Staff

Administration

Page 13: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

KEY ELEMENTS OF

EMPOWERMENT

InformationChoicesRespect/acceptanceHelp and support to others

Page 14: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

The Importance of Empowering Parents

Empowerment is a basic need for any parent raising a child

Treating parents as partners in the educational process is essential to school success

Program retention Voluntary participation: free choice Recruitment: being wanted and feeling

cared for Receptiveness to program messages

Page 15: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

What is Families and Schools Together (FAST)?

Created by a Social Worker Prevention/Early Intervention Program Collaborative model Whole family approach Multi-family group based Empowers parents UW Madison- Research Partner Builds relationships with community-

based organizations Gives youth a voice Builds youth leadership

Page 16: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Values of FAST Parents already have power; they have

the right to decide to use that power. Empowerment is not a top-down approach.

Look for strengths versus deficits in working with parents and families.

Parents are capable of being the primary prevention agents for their own children.

Stress and social isolation diminish parental effectiveness; social support increases parental effectiveness.

All parents love their children and want a better life for them.

Page 17: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

FAST Versions Baby FAST: for young

mothers/fathers, their mothers, and the babies (ages 0 - 3)

Early Childhood FAST: for parents and their children ages 3 - 5

Elementary School FAST: for parents and their children in K-5

Middle School FAST: for parents and children in 6-8th grade

High School FAST (under development): for parents and their 9th graders

Page 18: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Research Base Brain Research Social Capital Social Ecology of Child Development Social Control/Bonding Theory

• Hirschi, Naroll, Kohn & Massey Family Stress & Coping Theory

• Hill & McCubbin Family Systems Theory

• Minuchin, Satir, Parsons & Alexander Risk & Protective Factors Research

• Werner, Gramezy,Schedler & Block, Rutter, Kumpher & Hawkins

Page 19: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Social Ecology of Youth Development

Youth

Page 20: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Social Ecology of Youth Development

YouthFamily

Page 21: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Social Ecology of Child Development

YouthFamily

School

Page 22: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Social Ecology of Youth Development

YouthFamily

School&

Social Workers

NeighborhoodCommunity

Page 23: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Social Ecology of Youth Development

Family

School

Community

Youth

Page 24: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

To become a successful adult,a youth needs support from at

least one caring adult

Page 25: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

“A mother’s eyes are a baby’s skies.”

Page 26: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

To be tuned into a child, a father/mother needs

support

Page 27: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

“Relationships are to child development what location is to real estate.”

James Comer, M.D.Psychiatrist, Yale University

Page 28: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Program Goals

Enhance family functioning Prevent the focal youth from experiencing

school failure Prevent substance abuse by the youth and

family Reduce the stress that parents and youth

experience from daily life situations

Overall, to increase the likelihood of the youth being successful in the home, in middle school, and in the community.

Page 29: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Why these goals?

Families with high conflict are more likely to have youth who use alcohol

Families with high cohesion and expressiveness are less likely to have depression and loneliness

Children who have good impulse control will do better in school

Page 30: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

FAST Team

Parent Partner School Partner Mental Health Professional Substance Abuse/AODA

Professional Youth Representative Youth Advocate Volunteers

Team must be ethnically representative of families being served

For greater success recruiting fathers, team should include men.

Page 31: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

How Does Middle School FAST Work?

14 Weekly Youth Rap Sessions 10 Weekly Multi-Family Group Sessions Fun, Interactive Programming

Week 1

Youth Group – 14 Weekly Meetings

Weeks 1 – 14, Led by Youth Advocate & Youth Partner

Family Group – 10 Weekly Meetings

Weeks 5 – 14, Led by the Whole Team

Week 5 Week 14

Page 32: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Family Unit at Family Table•Flag (1st night only)•Meal•FAST Hello •FAST Song

Parents’ Time•Buddy Time•Parent Self-Help Group

Kids’ TimeChildren divided by age group for group activities

Peer GroupTime

YOUTH GROUP AT FAST

One-to-One TimeFocal Youth & Parent

Family Table: GAME & Lotto

Closing Circle Announcements & RAIN

Siblings continue Kids’

Time

10 weeks of family meetings

Page 33: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Page 34: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Page 35: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Page 36: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Page 37: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Parent’s Time

Page 38: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Page 39: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Page 40: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Page 41: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Page 42: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Page 43: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Week 5 – Violence Prevention, Gangs, Substance, etc.

Week 10 – Graduation Ceremony

FAST Special Sessions

Page 44: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Page 45: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

The Story of the LaGrange School District, Illinois

Recipient of the Directors Award for Excellence in Transforming and Promoting Mental Health

of Young Children by SAMHSA in 2004

Page 46: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

LaGrange Mental Health Crisis

Benefits of collaborative team (different areas of expertise)

Benefits of collaborating with community agencies

Benefits of accessing community resources

Page 47: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Keys To Success

Collaboration across agencies, building social capital

Respect for participants Programmatic fidelity:

adaptation, not drift Cultural representation

Page 48: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Evaluation

Each program cycle is evaluated Parents and youth complete pre- and

post-tests n=1,956 youth n=1,907 parents

Page 49: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Measures Social Relationships Questionnaire (children,

other adults) Social Support (emotional, tangible,

affectionate and total support) Reciprocal Support with Other Parents Parental Involvement in Education Family Environment Scale (FES)-Family

Relationships Index (Completed by both Parents and Youth)

Parenting Style Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire

(Completed by both Parents and Youth) Youth Stress Checklist Coping Responses Checklist School Behavior

Page 50: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Parent Respondents

Average age: 39 years

Race/Ethnicity 43% Caucasian/White 27% Hispanic/Latino 21% African American/BlackRelationship to youth 89% mother/father 5% grandparentMarital status 53% married 16% divorced 12% never married 7% separated 7% member of unmarried couple

Page 51: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Parent Respondents

Educational attainment 21% less than high school education 31% high school diploma or GED 10% junior/vocational college 19% some college – not junior/vocational 20% college graduate and/or graduate schoolEmployment status 51% full-time job 16% part-time job 10% unemployed, looking for work 11% not employed outside home 8% disabled, unable to work

Page 52: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Youth Respondents

Average age: 12 years

Gender 48% male 52% femaleSchool behavior Suspended from school in past year: 26% Skipped school in past year: 36% Grades, mostly C’s and below: 22%

Page 53: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Building Relationships has Results for Adults

and YouthAfter FAST, percent of parents reporting…86%

44%

51% 51%

27%22%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

New Friends AdultEducation

Return toWork

AttendChurch

PTO Volunteering

Page 54: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Parenting Skills

Parents rated their own levels of personal effectiveness in general, in social situations, and as parents. Self-efficacy scores showed that 51% of parents improved.

Page 55: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Youth’s Strengths & Difficulties

On the Strengths & Difficulties Questionnaire, parents reported improvements on the following:

These findings indicate that youth behavior has improved.

44%49% 46% 48% 43%

63%

33%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

ProsocialBehaviors

EmotionalSymptoms

ConductProblems

Hyperactivity PeerProblems

TotalDifficulties

Impact ofDifficulties

Page 56: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Social and Reciprocal Support Improved

43%

53%

71%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

EmotionalSupport

Total Support Total SocialRelationships

56% 57%61%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

SupportProvided

SupportReceived

TotalReciprocalSupport

On the Social Support Questionnaire, parents reported the following improvements:

Page 57: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

Parent Involvement in Education

On the Parent Involvement in Education Questionnaire, parents reported the following improvements:

These increases in parental involvement in school are likely to result in greater academic success of FAST youth.

52%47%

43%

56%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

Parent SchoolInvolvement

Parent toSchool Contact

School toParent Contact

Total ParentInvolvement

Page 58: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

For More Information

Families And Schools Together, Inc.2801 International Lane, Suite 212

Madison, WI 53704

(888) [email protected]

www.familiesandschools.org

Page 59: Families and Schools Together Inc. Involved Parents, Schools and Community Organizations in Creating a System of Care for Children

Families and Schools Together Inc.

International Headquarters address:Families and Schools Together Inc.2801 International Lane, Suite 212

Madison, WI 53704-3151

Phone: 608-663-2382Toll-free: 888-629-2481Fax: 608-663-2336