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ABOUT The
Dynamic Community Connections Project
The Dynamic Community
Connections Project (DCCP) was developed to enhance public awareness
about early intervention services and the referral process for the
services for young children with developmental delays and disabilities
and their families in Montana. The awareness of the need to
enhance public awareness and child find efforts became apparent as
the Infant and Toddler Program agencies in Montana prepared for federal
monitoring of Montana's Part C Early Intervention (EI) services. Therefore,
when the Department of Education issued a request for proposals concerning
child find programs the Rural Institute collaborated with Montana's
Part C lead agency, the Developmental Disabilities Program of the
Department of Public Health and Human Services, Teaching Research
of Western Oregon University and regional early intervention agencies
in Montana and Oregon to develop a grant proposal. DCCP was
one of six grants funded for four years to develop unique child find
demonstration projects.
DCCP is based on
the premise that how people access information may be unique in rural
areas and that statewide public awareness campaigns may not reach
certain rural populations. Thus, public awareness and child
find campaigns need to be specifically developed for rural areas. Other
key foundations for successful and comprehensive campaigns in rural
areas are:
- Local early intervention agencies need to partner with other
health, human, and education service providers and agencies.
- Parents of children with disabilities need to be full partners
in designing local campaigns.
- Public awareness and child find campaigns should help children
and families access any service they may need not just Part C EI
services.
- Individuals organizing local efforts need skills in coordinating
multiple agency community efforts, conducting planning oriented meetings,
and marketing programs.
The primary outcome of the project is the demonstration of an innovative
process model for developing comprehensive child find programs that are
replicable in Early Intervention programs in rural communities and results
in:
- an increased number of children served under Part C EI;
- an increased number of children referred to local child find
by specific referral sources;
- an increased number and proportion of infants (birth to one
year) served under Part C EI relative to the total number served;
- changes in the collaborative linkages and efforts among local
health, human services, education and child care programs;
- documentation of project strategies in the forms of component
guidelines, project manual and reports;
- expansion of knowledge concerning application of a collaborative
process model for improving child find programs in rural areas; and
- dissemination of project products and findings to audiences
concerned about and involved with Early Intervention services in
rural and remote areas.
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