| Literature DB >> 33304875 |
Taja Francis1, Helen Baker-Henningham1,2.
Abstract
This paper describes the development of the Irie Homes Toolbox, a violence prevention program targeting parents of children aged two to six years. The intervention was designed to complement an existing, teacher-training, violence prevention program, the Irie Classroom Toolbox, thus promoting an integrated approach across home and school settings. The Irie Homes Toolbox was developed through a four-stage process by integrating data from theory, formative research, and practice to ensure the intervention is acceptable, feasible, relevant, and effective in the context. The perspectives of Jamaican preschool teachers and parents of preschool children, who are the end users, were integrated into the design of the intervention throughout the development process. Stage one involved integrating theory and formative research to inform the initial intervention design. Stages two and three involved iterative cycles of design, implementation and evaluation of the intervention content, process of delivery, structure and materials. Stage four involved a further cycle of learning through a process evaluation conducted as part of a cluster-randomized controlled trial. Data from each of these four stages was used to inform the design and ongoing revisions of the toolbox with the aim of developing a low-cost, scalable and sustainable intervention for the Jamaican context. The resulting program is theory-informed and uses empirically derived content and behavior change principles operationalized for the context in which it will be delivered. The Irie Homes Toolbox is suitable for integration into the existing preschool provision in Jamaica, thus utilizing an existing service and existing staff and increasing the likelihood for wide-scale dissemination.Entities:
Keywords: behavior change; early childhood; intervention development; low-and middle-income country; parent training; violence prevention
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33304875 PMCID: PMC7701241 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.582961
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1Stages in the development of the Irie Homes Toolbox.
Core content and behavior change techniques used in parenting interventions to prevent and/or treat child disruptive behavior and child maltreatment and in the Irie Classroom Toolbox.
Knowledge of child development Parent-child relationship building Child-led play Praise Rewards Promoting children's social skills Giving commands Setting rules Ignoring negative behavior Timeout Consequences Anger management Emotional communication (understanding, identifying and labeling emotions) Parent-self management Consistent responding | Praise Rewards Choices Responsibilities Coaching/narrating Interactive reading Clear Instructions Teaching required skills Emotion regulation Anger management Redirect Withdraw attention Consequences Discipline hierarchy |
Psychoeducation Role-plays, practice and rehearsal Demonstration and modeling Positive and supportive feedback Problem solving Practicing with own child Assigning homework Providing materials Reviewing goals and progress | Modeling Demonstrations Role-plays, practice and rehearsal Positive and supportive feedback Goal setting Collaborative problem-solving Classroom assignments Providing resources Group/peer support |
How parents' interview responses were used in the development of the intervention.
| Common misbehaviours and reasons for slapping child | • Practice activities were designed to demonstrate and practice how to teach desired skills to children (e.g., how to pack up toys, how to put toothpaste on a toothbrush, how to put dirty clothes in the wash basket). |
| Instructions given to child repeatedly | • The phrases reported by parents were used to design role-plays to help parents to give clear instructions. The role plays involved the facilitator using common ineffective instructions (e.g., “Behave yourself,” “settle down,” “relax yourself,” “stop doing that”) and the parents would problem-solve how to change the ineffective to an effective instruction. |
| Typical games/toys children play with | • The parental responses informed the play materials that would be used in the program. These included coloring, blocks, cars, animals, kitchen set, and picture books. |
| Words used to praise and to reprimand child | • These words were used in the dialogue for role-plays. This ensures the content was relatable to parents. |
| Household routines, common activities and common issues | • Visual aids were developed to depict everyday routines of children and parents (e.g., eating breakfast, bathing, brushing teeth, getting dressed) and common household chores (e.g., washing clothes, making dumplings, sweeping). These visual aids were used to encourage parents to think about (1) what they can say to their child, (2) what they can praise their child for, (3) what skills they can teach their child, (4) how they can involve their child, and (5) how they can promote choice and independence. |
Figure 2Theory of change.
Decisions made to improve the acceptability, feasibility, and relevance of the intervention.
| Fun and engaging | • Session structure incorporates variety to maintain interest. |
| Acknowledges parents' strengths | • Parents share positive strategies they are using and are praised for using them. |
| Parents see benefits to themselves and their child | • Brainstorms and discussions are done to point out benefits of the strategies. |
| Logistics of session: timing and duration | • The sessions are conducted at a convenient time: either in the mornings when parents drop off their child or in the afternoon after school, depending on the availability of parents in the group. Sessions are conducted while the child is at school so they don't need to arrange for child care. |
| Minimum equipment required to conduct intervention | • All visual aids were designed to be hand-held and we choose not to use a flip-charts and a flip chart stand to display materials or to scribe parents' responses. |
| Parents are able to use strategies in their daily lives | • Content presented easily fits into parents' daily routines with their children. |
| Individualizing the content | • Parents are encouraged to share any difficulties faced with their use of the strategies at home and to engage in group problem-solving. |
| Scenarios/examples resonate with parents | • Incorporate content that resonated with parents the most. |
| Include content related to homework | • As the parenting intervention is designed to be integrated into the services provided by preschools, we included a session on how parents can support their child's homework. This included content on homework routines, explaining the task, scaffolding their child, and providing positive and corrective feedback. |
Decisions made to improve the effectiveness of the intervention.
| Logistic of session: group size | • The group size is small (6 participants) so that each participant gets an opportunity to practice skills with individual support. |
| Parent understanding of skills and using the strategies | • Facilitators model the use of the strategies throughout the sessions. |
| Parents are motivated to use the strategies | • Parents are given positive feedback when they use the strategies in the group and when they share how they used the strategies at home. |
| Parents use strategies at home | • Home assignments are given that encourage parents to use the strategies at home. |
| Parents can generalize to a variety of situations | • Parents set individual goals of how they will use the strategies across different context and situations. This encourages parents to consider how the strategies can be integrated into their daily lives and increases the chances of them using it. |
| Collaborative, supportive/non-critical | • Parents are encouraged to openly share their struggles with parenting and to engage in group problem-solving. |
| Session structure | • In addition to discussions, demonstrations, practice, and rehearsal with the parents, we decided to include the opportunity for parents to also practice the child-led play activities with their child as an integral part of each session. During this practice activity, parents receive support, and feedback from the facilitators. |
Refinements made to the content, delivery, materials, and structure of the intervention in stage three.
| Additional content: included content that would explicitly benefit parents | • Self-praise: each week parents share one thing they are proud of as a parent. This was necessary as we recognized that the parents found it difficult to identify and verbalize their positive parenting skills. |
| Content misunderstood/hard to grasp: refinement included: changing the delivery format or including an additional mode of delivery to better elucidate the concept. | • Include additional demonstrations by the facilitator prior to having the parents role-play a skill when necessary. This ensured the parents had a better understanding of how to use the strategy prior to participating in the activity. |
| Session structure: include a structured feedback section in each session where parents share how they completed the home assignment. | • More structure was given to the feedback part of the session to encourage parents to do the home assignments. Each parent shared how they used the strategies at home, using the weekly record sheet as a guide. This demonstrates the importance of completing the assignment and shows that it is expected that program participants engage with the material at home. |
| Additional materials: irie parent oath, irie tower | • At the end of the final session of the program parents sign an oath that they will continue to be an Irie Parent and use the strategies learnt. The oath is designed to help parents self-identify as an Irie Parent. |
| Building in redundancy | • We revised the parent training scripts to ensure that the key concepts are reinforced as often as possible in every session. |
| Additional training guidelines for the co-facilitator | • To promote the engagement of the co-facilitator in the parent sessions, we designed a structured, scripted role in the session for the co-facilitator which was made explicit in the script. This role included participating in role plays and demonstrations, prompting, and coaching parents as they practiced the activities, promoting parent engagement, and assisting parents as they practiced with their child. |
Figure 3Acceptability, feasibility, relevance and effectiveness of a behavior change intervention.
Parents' perceptions of the benefits of the Irie Homes Toolbox.
| Parent is better able to regulate emotions | • “It help me because I can look at myself and say alright I am going to try to control my anger, I'm going to try to control my temper, I am going to try and control my emotions.” |
| Parent bonds more with child | • “It make me spend more time with them and help me to identify when something is wrong with them and it also helps to meet their needs more.” |
| Parent uses less violence against children | • “I stop beating I just start putting him in the corner. I just used to lick (hit) him for.every little thing and I just stop do that and put him in the corner …so I realize that beatings don't have anything to do with it cause you beat them and them still not going to hear.” |
| Increased confidence and pride in parenting skills | • “It help me as a mommy, it make me feel proud of myself as a mother.” |
| Increased autonomy and responsibility | • “Yeah because all shoes them now, she put them under the dresser plus her dirty clothes, she put it in the basket without me have to tell her.” |
| Increased participation in chores | • “She sweep out the room, she will spread up the bed. Sweep off the veranda, just to get praise.” |
| Increased level of compliance by child | • “If you tell her to sit down she listen, it change her a whole heap because first time me talk to her she doesn't listen.” |
| Decrease in occurrence of tantrums and/or disruptive behaviors | • “…he is more calmer, he know how to share like it helps, even with the blocks. Instead of jumping up and down and doing things that is not right to get your attention.” |
| Program promotes positive behavior and emotions | • “He would do more good things to get your attention, so he wants to be good cause he wants your attention so you get less trouble and more good.” |
Teachers' perceptions of the benefits of the Irie Homes Toolbox.
| Parents show better emotional self-regulation | • “I realize that … they were better able to manage their emotions so they were calmer and I saw it in how they dealt with the children.” |
| Parents praise their child more | • “Praising the child more, they actually praise the child a lot more now. |
| Increased parental interest in school activities | • “You are now seeing the parents having more interest in how their children learn and the things that they do.” |
| Stronger parent/child relationship | • “Parents are spending more time with the child…interacting and getting to know their child, and know what their child is about.” |
| Parents use less violence against children | • “Instead of shouting at the child, screaming at the child, barking at the child and the licking, once they started learning how to manage the behavior, that gradually went.” |
| Children have fewer behavior difficulties | • “He [child] has changed because him nuh fling down himself anymore … Him nuh throw down and carry on, no tantrum nuh throw, nuh nothing.” |
| Children show increased confidence | • “It has built their confidence because like before some of them would've been a little bit more on the reserve side now they're interacting more, they're talking out more” |
| Children show increased autonomy and responsibility | • “Yeah they are excited, always wanting to do something all when nothing is on the floor they are sweeping. Yeah, they just want to be helpful.” |
| Teachers have increased emotional self-regulation | • “So it actually show me. how to manage my emotions, do not lose temper, being in control, it actually help me to do that.” |
| Teacher uses less violence against children at home and at school | • “So interacting with this program it has now rounded me a little bit more on how to effectively parent without administering slaps.” |
| Teacher increased use of other strategies from the Toolbox at home and at school | • “It help me with the praising, the modeling, knowing each child in the classroom, so praising and awarding them like that is one of the biggest things for my class, and withdrawing attention.” |
| Stronger parent-teacher relationships | • “We work together and anything they can come to me and they can talk with me, they can send messages, they write notes. We have a communication.” |
| Teacher shows more empathy toward parents | • “So things that I took for granted that they knew, they really didn't know. It was like an eye opener and it taught me how to be a little more patient and tolerant with them.” |
Areas of the intervention requiring revision as extracted from the process evaluation tool and changes made in stage four.
| A core component of the program is the use of modeling (that is being a role model for your child). The strategy modeling was not explicitly introduced, it was discussed and explained when it came up organically during a session. | • Incorporate content in the intervention so that it is explicitly addressed. |
| Parents sometimes missed a session and the sessions are cumulative. Therefore, a strategy to ensure parents can catch up is required. | • During the feedback portion of the sessions, prompt parents to demonstrate how they used the strategies at home, instead of simply discussing it. This ensures that parents who have missed a session see a demonstration of the skills. |
| Games were used to introduce some skills and parents sometimes had difficulty generalizing the skills used in a game to an activity with their child. | • After playing the game, conduct a brainstorm of different things parents can say and do with their child during the activity. |
| For some of the practice activities, parents needed additional scaffolding before being asked to practice the activity themselves. | • Develop different delivery methods to make the skills clearer. For example, incorporate additional demonstrations, provide clear and simple guidelines of the steps demonstrated, use a visual aid showing the strategy in use, and/or brainstorm with parents what they can say or do prior to asking them to practice the activity. |
| There were times when parents were less engaged with the material in the sessions. | • Make adaptations to maximize parent participation by revising the delivery mode for the content to make it more fun, engaging, and interactive. |
| Labeling children's emotions was a relatively new concept for parents and they often reported that they did not use this strategy at home. | • Develop additional practice activities in labeling emotions and include additional emphasis on the rationale for labeling children's emotions so that parents view this as important. |
| Although the simple and clear guidelines outlining the steps in using a strategy were generally helpful, some parents stuck to the guidelines too rigidly and missed opportunities to expand their interaction with child. | • Facilitators need to make it clear that the guidelines can be used like a recipe. The steps provide the overall structure and parents can add additional steps to it according to their child's interests, needs, and responses. |
| In the session that included problem-solving activities around managing child misbehavior, parents often chose the same three strategies (clear instruction, chillax, and consequences), rather than using the full range of skills introduced in the program. | • Develop a wider variety of child misbehavior scenarios to ensure there is a good match for each strategy introduced through the program. |
| Parents sometimes found it difficult to see things from their child's point of view. | • Provide additional opportunities for parents to play the role of the “child” especially in situations in which they were less empathic. |
Session content of the Irie Homes Toolbox.
| 1 | Praise | Paying attention to your child's positive behavior. | Coloring |
| 2 | Praise throughout the day | Giving your child positive attention during daily activities by describing what your child is doing and responding to your child. | Blocks |
| 3 | Clear instructions | How to give your child clear instructions. | Picture book (My School Day) |
| 4 | Why children misbehave and teaching household rules | Understanding the reasons for child misbehavior. | Blocks and animal |
| 5 | Emotions | Understanding how your own emotions affect the way you respond to your child's behavior. | Picture book (My Emotions) |
| 6 | Managing misbehavior 1 | Redirecting your child's attention and behavior. | Blocks, animals, and a vehicle |
| 7 | Managing misbehavior 2 | How to use Chillax (timeout for misbehavior). | Pretend play (kitchen set) |
| 8 | Helping with homework | Establishing a homework routine. | Picture book (My Day with Mommy) |
Figure 4The Irie Tower: pictorial representation of the strategies introduced in the Irie Homes Toolbox. The base of the tower (green blocks) are strategies to promote positive behavior and to build a positive parent-child relationship. The yellow blocks are strategies to prevent child misbehavior. The orange and red blocks are strategies to manage child misbehavior. Parents are encouraged to use the strategies in the two bottom rows liberally and the strategies in the top rows more sparingly.
Figure 5Examples of resources used in the Irie Homes Toolbox.
Figure 6The Irie parent oath.