Partnership Working among Families, Therapists and Educationalists to Enhance Collaboration Enabling Participation of Children with Intellectual Disabilities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Prerequisite for Collaboration
Well, the information should change. Regularly. I would miss mutual respect for each other’s work. Acceptance that we have different tasks. I think that’s enough to get you pretty far (School, interview).
In a successful collaboration, the observations made individually about the child’s concentration, interaction, and learning methods are taken into everyday life and are reinforced. Also, reciprocally: the therapist is told what works in everyday life, and what things could be strengthened in therapy as well (Speech therapist, survey).
It is successful when the kindergarten and school staff think that their actions can influence the child’s rehabilitation, and they have the time to do so. It is about commitment (Occupational therapist, survey).
That’s perhaps what’s most important for me, that there would be a group with the therapists, and they have a group on the work phone where they would all be. There should be an assistant from the school or from the preschool if there was one person from all sides who would take care of the child’s affairs. So they would be able to work together in a completely different way and not have to be like, well, call this person, call that person, you don’t call five different people, and so you can always go and read about it. So, it’s like collaboration, that’s the most important thing (Parent, interview).
Each actor has his own way of working, so the therapist’s instructions are not always welcome. A sense of urgency plagues almost all kindergartens, schools, and housing units, and sometimes the presence of therapists is perceived as pressure. They can’t stand adopting new things or believe in the transfer effect. In this case, however, the child’s experience in therapy is valuable: the right to come, to succeed, to be a visible and valuable individual, to learn alone without the pressure of a group. It is also noticeable that, for example, communication tools and aids are often little used by older rehabilitators in everyday life, and what is learned in therapy is not reinforced (Occupational Therapist, survey).
And then there are therapists who don’t go to school, so they don’t necessarily understand the kind of teaching we do. You have to explain it or if they ask. But they may also have misconceptions about what kind of school we have, and what kind of education the child receives here (School, interview).
Furthermore, I would say that the information moves, the movement of information, that it does not stay in something, is closed to information that does not move. If it is only known to one person on a piece of paper, what good does it do to that child if it doesn’t move into everyday life? … Part of it comes from openness, and knowledge doesn’t move. It’s terribly important (Early childhood education, interview).
3.2. Sharing Expertise in Daily Activities
Regular communication would be needed to enable cooperation, participating in fairs once or even twice a year isn’t enough. Unfortunately, the everyday life of schools is often so busy that it is impossible to regularly exchange or guide students (Occupational therapist, survey).
Well, I have, at least from speech therapy. So it’s incredibly important, even if the communication folders, building them, and the content that is needed in school, for example. And joint negotiation and planning in which situations they will be used. And feedback from both sides to see how things are going. And whether the child has been supported with the same goals. That’s an example of communication (School, interview).
I would think that the therapists would bring their own expertise, more know-how to this work. Yes, and it is something when they can focus so much more individually on that one child and their needs... And then also the fact that they may also see the situation from the outside if they come even to that group to see, so they can also give those tips in a way from a different perspective. When you’re caught up in everyday life, it may not always see the outside view that, hey, this situation could be quite different (Early childhood education, interview).
It’s pretty much exactly that, if the cooperation works, we also know the goals, and we’ll be able to implement them in early childhood education and start thinking about them. If there’s a challenge, we’ll get good instructions from the physiotherapist, this is worth taking into account. It’s easy for us to take it forward in everyday life and to look for them in situations where we pay attention. It gets integrated into our everyday life. What we offer here is tied to everyday work. It doesn’t happen there, in the everyday doing (Early childhood education, interview).
… he (therapist) himself said that he also looks at the kindergarten and how the activities are there, that it’s not as if he goes there and is there with the boy. So, I thought that was kind of wonderful. If necessary, the other staff are instructed or monitored to see if something needs to be corrected in the activities, or if someone is doing better, if we do things differently with him (Parent, interview).
In my opinion, an important aspect of that is also the constant conversation with the therapist about that, or with the therapists about what is being done with that child here in the kindergarten. So that’s where the tips come from—hey, we did this, it’s going to work well, and this was a meaningful exercise. It also brings us things in common, in a way you are not at the same things, and it also brings assurance that we’re doing the right things when we ponder and think about them together (Early childhood education, interview).
4. Discussion
4.1. Strengths and Limitations
4.2. Future Directions
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristic | n | % |
---|---|---|
Professional Title of Therapist | 345 | |
Physiotherapist | 41 | 13 |
Musical Therapist | 30 | 10 |
Neuropsychologist | 13 | 4 |
Psychotherapist | 49 | 16 |
Speech Therapist | 95 | 31 |
Riding Therapist | 23 | 7 |
Occupational Therapist | 94 | 30 |
Professional Title of Education professionals | 48 | |
Teacher of Kindergarten | 5 | 10 |
Special Early Childhood Education Teacher | 9 | 19 |
Other Staff of Kindergarten | 10 | 21 |
Teacher of Primary School | 5 | 10 |
Special Education Teacher | 12 | 25 |
Other Staff of Primary School | 7 | 15 |
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Kinnunen, A.; Vesterinen, A.; Kippola-Pääkkönen, A.; Karhula, M. Partnership Working among Families, Therapists and Educationalists to Enhance Collaboration Enabling Participation of Children with Intellectual Disabilities. Disabilities 2023, 3, 396-409. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities3030026
Kinnunen A, Vesterinen A, Kippola-Pääkkönen A, Karhula M. Partnership Working among Families, Therapists and Educationalists to Enhance Collaboration Enabling Participation of Children with Intellectual Disabilities. Disabilities. 2023; 3(3):396-409. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities3030026
Chicago/Turabian StyleKinnunen, Anu, Annastiina Vesterinen, Anu Kippola-Pääkkönen, and Maarit Karhula. 2023. "Partnership Working among Families, Therapists and Educationalists to Enhance Collaboration Enabling Participation of Children with Intellectual Disabilities" Disabilities 3, no. 3: 396-409. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities3030026
APA StyleKinnunen, A., Vesterinen, A., Kippola-Pääkkönen, A., & Karhula, M. (2023). Partnership Working among Families, Therapists and Educationalists to Enhance Collaboration Enabling Participation of Children with Intellectual Disabilities. Disabilities, 3(3), 396-409. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities3030026