3 Reasons to Go "Bagless" in Early Intervention
March 20, 2017
4 min. read
In early intervention (EI), therapists work in the homes and community settings where families live and play. For these therapists, there is a growing trend toward the concept of going bagless. So, what does it mean to go bagless?
The concept centers around entering the familys space and using our skills and knowledge to coach parents in understanding and supporting their childs development using only what they have immediately available no books, no toys, and no therapy equipment of our own. This can be a call to complete surrender to the therapist who is accustomed to guiding therapy sessions with certain supplies.
The bagless concept might be scary to the seasoned EI therapist. It may even invoke the same fear encountered when they first moved into the EI setting. However, the bagless concept, actually encompasses and emphasizes our goals as therapists working in EI:
Surrender of our opinions
Immersion into each familys world
Reliance on clinical skill, creativity, and organization
Focus on the family as the best early teachers for their child
When we go bagless we return to these basics of early intervention.
3 Reasons to Go Bagless
What does going bagless look like in everyday situations and why should we adopt this therapy approach? Here are three reasons to consider for going bagless in EI.
1. Family Focused
Going bagless recenters our attention back on the natural environment and on the child and their familys needs.
Natural Environment
Under IDEA law, children and families with developmental challenges and diagnoses are entitled to therapy services in their natural environments - meaning their homes, playgrounds, and communities. Under this law, therapists as part of a multidisciplinary team are focused on the familys needs and wishes for their child.
If we are truly following through with the focus of the law, we are using our clinical experience to examine a familys unique situation, including home environment, family emotional makeup, and priorities. This means letting go of our expectations and offering our skills to help the family support their child with their expectations.
Two Patients
Work in early intervention means you work to inspire and work alongside two patients - the child you are seeing and their family. We get to assist in and witness firsthand the family become empowered to help their child meet their goals and follow their dreams. And, at the end of the day - you dont need a bag for that important work.
2. Flexible Learning & Personal Growth
Going bagless means therapy is flexible around the childs needs and the familys goals. Youre showing up ready to immerse yourself in their world. There are no barriers or preconceived concepts that stand in the way of using your creative clinical skills to develop a meaningful treatment plan. Youre also easily adaptable and able to learn on the fly.
3. Fun
Working in a home allows us to provide functional support and creative solutions for everyday activities.
Functional Therapy
As an EI therapist, we jump into a familys daily routines and activities. We see firsthand their struggles and can model strategies to support them right there where they live. For example, if a child struggles with safely walking stairs, we get to practice stairs on the familys actual stairs. If a child has feeding challenges, we come over for breakfast. If a child is frustrated due to lack of language we get to observe their attempts at communication in their natural environment. Theres no worry about potential carry over because we are teaching and supporting in the actual setting and lucky for us, this almost always means we get to play for work!
Creative Solutions
Work in early intervention affords therapists the ability to flex creative muscles, like forming a therapy plan out of a familys dreams for their child and what they have available in the home. That often means paper towel rolls, magazine clippings, or a siblings soccer ball.
The EI world can be unpredictable, but going bagless prepares you well for this exciting setting. Flexibility and willingness to continually learn and grow is a must in any therapy setting, but particularly when working in EI. Adopt a bagless approach and refocus your attention on your patient and their family; all of you will benefit greatly from this unique approach!
Below, watch Nicole Sergent discuss the importance of the natural environment in a short video from her and Lacy Morise's course, Getting Started in Early Intervention.