Purpose: This article presents a rationale for specialized services  personnel to use fluid models of service delivery and explains how  specialized services personnel make decisions about the blend of service  delivery methods that will best serve a child. 
  Method: The literature on occupational therapy,  physical therapy, and speech-language  pathology service delivery in early childhood programs is reviewed,  synthesized, and applied to current practice. The literature explains  that direct and consultative services provide unique benefits to  children and should be flexibly scheduled based on each child's current  priorities. Flexible service delivery models allow therapists to meet  the evolving needs of children within dynamic environments. 
  Conclusion: To establish fluid service delivery models, therapists need  to (a) plan collaboratively with teachers so that the model selected  meets the teacher's preferences, (b) design flexible scheduling systems  that emphasize inclusive practice, and (c) maintain precise  documentation about when and how services are provided. 
  KEY WORDS: early childhood special education, service delivery,  consultative services
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COPYRIGHT 2009 American Speech-Language-Hearing  Association   Early childhood scholars (e.g., Odom & Wolery, 2003; Rapport,  McWilliam, & Smith, 2004; Sandall, McLean, & Smith, 2000; Wolery  & Wilbers, 1994) have reached consensus about the importance of  inclusive, integrated models of service delivery in early childhood  programs. One defining element of inclusive early childhood programs is  that young children with disabilities attend community programs with  their typical peers. Research evidence (e.g., Guralnick, Connor,  Hammond, Gottman, & Kinnish, 1996; Hundert, Mahoney, Mundy, &  Vernon, 1998; Odom & Diamond, 1998) supports the notion that  children with disabilities gain competence when they participate in  enriched learning opportunities with typically developing peers as  social partners. Therefore, an essential goal of inclusive early  childhood education programs is to promote friendships and social  relationships among children with and without disabilities (Guralnick,  1990; Strain, 1990). Researchers have found that children with  disabilities are more interactive in inclusive settings than in  segregated settings (Guralnick et al., 1996) and are more likely to  interact when the ratio of typically developing peers is higher  (Hauser-Cram, Bronson, & Upshur, 1993). Parents believe that their  children with special needs benefit from inclusive settings and report  that inclusive programs help their children improve their social skills  and relationships with peers (Bennett, Delucca, & Bruns, 1997;  Guralnick, Connor, & Hammond, 1995). As such, early childhood  classrooms appear to offer enriched opportunities for children to learn  developmental skills and acquire competence as social partners. 
  A second defining element of inclusive early childhood programs is that  therapists provide services that use the child's naturally occurring  activities within the classroom routine (Giangreco, 1986; McWilliam,  1995). To learn new skills, children need frequent practice and multiple  opportunities to experience the activity. Practicing the skill in an  isolated setting once or twice a week is less likely to produce learning  that leads to new behaviors and increased competence. To allow for  frequent practice and frequent reinforcement of a new skill, therapists  (including occupational therapists [OTs], physical therapists [PTs], and  speech-language pathologists [SLPs]) work with children with  disabilities in their natural learning environments (McWilliam,  1995,1996). Services in the child's everyday naturally occurring routine  are likely to have greater meaning to the child than are services in an  isolated setting (Odom & Wolery, 2003). In addition, when  therapeutic strategies are introduced in the child's everyday  environment, they are likely to be (a) implemented by caregivers and  teachers, (b) frequently practiced, and (c) generalized to the child's  everyday routine (Justice, Sofka, & McGinty, 2007). 
  Integrated service delivery implies that therapy services are provided  in the classroom and that therapists become part of the early childhood  program routine (e.g., during circle time, art activities, or snack).  The advantages of this model include that (a) the therapists learn the  routines of the classroom and the performance demands on the child, (b)  the therapists model for the teachers with the goal that the therapeutic  strategies will be implemented when the therapist is not present, and  (c) the child remains in his or her natural everyday environment (Odom  et al., 2004; Pohlman & McWilliam, 1999; Sandall, Schwartz, &  Joseph, 2001). These elements promote the child's practice of specific  skills in different contexts and, therefore, the generalization of  emerging skills to different contexts. 
  To achieve an integrated, inclusive practice model, the adults who  interact with the child must share the same goals, agree on the methods  of interaction, and agree to a set of priorities. First steps to  agreeing on goals and priorities are that professionals adopt a common  vocabulary across disciplines and share philosophies about best  practice. Taking the time to hold discussions about professional  philosophies and perspectives enables the team to find commonalities and  to bridge differences, hence removing barriers to teamwork. With this  foundation, therapists, teachers, and families recognize the need for  integrated, cross-disciplinary child goals (rather than therapy goals).  In addition to identifying and prioritizing the child's goals, the team  collaborates to decide what types of service delivery will optimally  support those goals (Rapport et al., 2004). With a plan in place, the  recommended method for sharing professional knowledge and roles relative  to the child's individualized education program (IEP) is through  consultation and coaching. Although leaders in early childhood education  have advocated that consultation become the primary model for service  delivery (Odom & Wolery, 2003; McWilliam, 1996), practicing  therapists continue to use a variety of models, including direct service  and one-on-one interventions. 
  Dilemmas in Inclusive Service Delivery 
  Despite extensive literature describing inclusive models for therapy  service delivery in early childhood programs (e.g., Dunst, Trivette,  Humphries, Raab, & Roper, 2001; Rapport et al., 2004), the reality  remains that integrated models for specialized services are not always  applied. OTs continue to provide up to 30% of their services using a  pull-out model in which the therapist works one-on-one with the child  outside the classroom (Barnes &Turner, 2001; Holland, 2007). Surveys  have found that OTs provide approximately 50% direct services (i.e.,  one-on-one or in small groups) and approximately 50% indirect services  (i.e., consultation or education to teachers or family; Case-Smith &  Cable, 1996; Holland, 2007). SLPs provide almost 55% (22 hr/week) of  school-based services using a pull-out model (American  Speech-Language-Hearing Association [ASHA], 2008). The types of services  that SLPs provide include 60% direct services, 22% indirect services,  10% screening and diagnostic evaluation, and 8% consultation (ASHA,  2008). Given the benefits of consultation, it is puzzling that  therapists continue to provide these high percentages of direct  services. The surveys on school-based practice did not reveal how  therapists make decisions about which service delivery model to use.  This article discusses a rationale for OTs, PTs, and SLPs to use a  blended combination of one-on-one and small-group interventions with  consultation. We explain the need for flexible and dynamic service  delivery models and describe how OTs, PTs, and SLPs make decisions about  what blend of service delivery methods will best serve the child. 
  Direct Services: Why This Model Remains Relevant 
  OTs, PTs, and SLPs provide direct services one-on-one, in dyads, in  small groups, and at times in large groups. These models of service  delivery remain relevant to current practice because they allow  interaction with the child that informs the therapists' consultation  with the child's teachers and other therapists. The goals of direct,  individualized services include (a) to establish a relationship between  the child and therapist that facilitates particular performance goals;  (b) to offer, in addition to the teaching staff, support of the child's  social-emotional growth; (c) to gauge how to adapt an activity to  provide a "just-right challenge" to a particular child; and (d) to  obtain evaluation data about the child's performance that can be used to  make decisions about revising his or her program. 
  Odom and Wolery (2003) explicitly stated that effective early childhood  programs include one-on-one adult support of the child's participation  in the program's activities. Sandall et al. (2001) suggested that  individualized instruction is a hallmark of high-quality early childhood  education programs. This individualized support may include adapting or  simplifying the activity so that the child can perform it, encouraging  peer support, or physically assisting the child (Myers, Stephens, &  Tauber, in press; Valvano & Rapport, 2006). 
  Relationship-based interventions. In order to establish a relationship  with a child, the therapist should embed specific elements within the  intervention sessions (Bundy & Koomar, 2002). Termed "therapeutic  use of self," interactional methods are used to motivate, engage, and  energize others. To engage the child, the therapist should skillfully  select an activity of interest that is motivating to the child and give  the child choices during the activity (Case-Smith, Richardson, &  Schultz-Krohn, 2005; Girolametto & Weitzman, 2007; Whalen,  Schreibman, & Ingersoll, 2006). The therapist should encourage  positive affect by attending to and imitating the child's actions and  communication attempts, waiting for the child's response, establishing  eye contact, using gentle touch, and making nonevaluative comments. The  goal of these methods is to foster the child's sense of self and  internal control. This goal is particularly important to children with  disabilities, who may experience frequent directives and physical  assistance from others. Important to their effectiveness is that the  interactions are sustained, that they enable the child's trust, and that  they form the basis for an ongoing relationship (Kasari, Freeman, &  Paparella, 2006; Mahoney & Perales, 2005). 
  Studies of the effectiveness of relationship-based interventions suggest  that they promote communication and play (Greenspan & Wieder,  1997), socialemotional function (Mahoney & Perales, 2005; Solomon,  Necheles, Ferch, & Bruckman, 2007), and learning (Wieder &  Greenspan, 2005). In a review of 16 studies on the effectiveness of  social interactive training on early social communicative skills of  young children with autism, Hwang and Hughes (2000) identified four  interactive strategies that were common themes and appear to be critical  in facilitating communication. Three of the four techniques--contingent  imitation, naturally occurring reinforcement, and waiting for the  child's response--require a one-on-one or small-group context for  implementation. As SLPs are well aware, these strategies promote  increases in verbal responses, requesting skills, eye gaze, positive  affect, and attending. 
  Support of the child's socialemotional growth. The adults and peers who  regularly interact with the child have frequent opportunities to  facilitate his or her socialemotional growth. Therapists can contribute  to this essential aspect of a child's development when they are afforded  opportunities for one-on-one interaction. As described in the previous  section, socialemotional growth is supported through sustained  reciprocal interaction and responsive communication between the  therapist and child. Interactions are playful and joyful and are not  directive or evaluative. The therapist affirms the importance of the  child's actions and establishes the interaction using the child's  preferred play activity (Parham & Primeau, 1997). 
  Therapists hold the child's sense of self and self-worth as goals that  transcend other developmental goals. Although "sense of self " is seldom  adopted as a written goal, it is fundamental to learning and to  participating in a social environment. A child's self-worth is enhanced  when adults attend to and interact with the child. Although parents are  the essential elements to the child's social-emotional growth,  therapists and teachers can also support development through sustained  interactions that clearly demonstrate to the child his or her importance  and ability to affect the world. Parham et al. (2007) concluded, based  on their observational research of intervention services, that the  therapist engenders an atmosphere of trust and respect through  contingent interactions with the child. The activities are negotiated  between the therapist and child, and the therapist is responsive to  altering the task, interaction, and environment based on the child's  responses. The interactional component of the intervention appears to be  essential to eliciting a higher level response and promoting the  child's learning (Bundy, 2002b). 
  Adapting the activity to provide a "just-right challenge." 
  Direct, individualized services allow OTs, PTs, and SLPs to adapt and  grade the activity during their play interactions with the child.  Children progress and learn new skills when they are challenged to  perform an activity that is slightly more difficult than the skills that  they have mastered. Therefore, to acquire new skills, the child must be  placed in a situation that is somewhat stressful and somewhat demanding  but not overly frustrating as to cause failure. Determining the  just-right challenge requires the therapist to know the child's skill  set well and to identify the developmental levels of an activity (Koomar  & Bundy, 2002). Once the child engages in a developmentally  appropriate activity, the task may need to be simplified or modified to  create an easier challenge, or it may need to be modified to increase  the challenge. 
  The following scenario is an example of cotreatment that uses a  just-right challenge to elicit a child's optimal performance. 
   After setting up a play activity for a 4-year-old with
 communication and motor skill delays, the SLP, with the
 OTassisting, asks the child to select toy food items to place in a
 picnic basket, identifying and pointing to named foods. Because the
 child accurately identifies food items by pointing, the SLP prompts
 the child to name the food items and the OT cues the child to
 gesture how each food item is used (e.g., pouring the juice, biting
 the apple). To further challenge the child, the SLP and OT initiate
 a picnic lunch. They use simple verbal cues, clear gestures, and
 frequent reinforcement to facilitate the child's participation in
 the picnic. Together, they elicit the child's (a) requesting and
 sharing of food items, (b) pretend eating, and (c) single-word
 descriptions of the food (good, red).
    In this scenario, the SLP and OTextended a practice of naming food items  into an imaginative, multischeme, multistep play scenario. The SLP  modeled actionagent combinations to support the child's speech efforts,  and the OT modeled play actions to support the child's motor planning.  Throughout this activity, the therapists monitored the child's responses  so as to challenge the child and to elicit the next developmental steps  while reinforcing the child's efforts. 
  Tickle-Degnen and Coster (1995) studied how OTs challenged children in  sessions using a sensory integration approach. Based on time-sampled  ratings of behavior from video-recorded therapy sessions, therapists'  and children's interactions alternated between being playful and being  task oriented. When therapists achieved a just-right challenge, both  playfulness and task orientation were high. During a just-right  challenge, the child's initiative was high, the therapist was supportive  and playful, and the rapport between the therapist and child was high  (Tickle-Degnen & Coster, 1995). In a just-right challenge, the  therapist is intimately tuned into the child's responses to the  activity, adapting the activity based on the child's engagement and  success. 
  Ongoing evaluation of the child's performance. In children with special  needs, daily changes in behavior and performance can be expected and do  not always represent positive growth. For example, small changes in  routine (e.g., the mother is out of town or the breakfast routine is  altered) can cause a child with autism to regress. When therapists have  frequent one-on-one interactions with a child, they are sensitive to the  child's behavioral changes and can easily adjust the intervention. 
  Examples of when ongoing evaluation is needed are when the child  acquires new technology or adapted equipment or needs a modification of  existing equipment. When SLPs recommend adapted equipment (e.g.,  switches or an augmentative communication device), frequent one-on-one  evaluation is required to monitor its use and adjust or modify the  equipment. Ongoing assessment and adjustment are critical to ensure that  the equipment remains helpful and appropriate to the child. Initiating  the use of assistive technology or adapted equipment also requires  frequent consultation with the teachers and caregivers who support the  child's technology use. Consultation and direct services are virtually  always provided together and have limited effectiveness when only one is  provided. 
  Consultation Services: How Consultation Can Enrich the Child's Program 
  Consultation is frequently a component of OT, PT, and SLP services. The  amount of time that a therapist spends consulting with other adults  about a child should vary during the course of the child's program and  may increase when the child's medical condition changes, the child  receives new adaptive equipment, or the child's classroom or schedule  changes. Therefore, the intensity and type of consultation should be  based on the expressed interests of the teaching staff in addition to  the needs of the child. Therapists decide the level of consultation  based on the child's specific therapy needs, the type of program to be  implemented, classroom characteristics, and the teacher's skills and  training (Hanft & Place, 1996). 
  Because therapists complement and support, rather than replace, the  child's educational program, therapists' major role is to support  teachers in providing optimal instruction to students. Therapists  accomplish this role by promoting the teacher's understanding of the  communication, physiological, and health-related issues that affect the  child's behavior and assisting teachers in applying strategies to  promote the child's sensory, motor, and communicative performance.  Therapists also support teachers in adapting instructional activities to  enable the child's participation and in collecting data on the child's  performance. Therefore, the steps in consultation involve not only child  evaluation and intervention planning but also assessing the teacher's  learning needs and concerns about the child. In addition, consultation  is more likely to be effective when therapists gain knowledge about the  early childhood curriculum and develop an understanding of how the  classroom environment is organized. 
  Working effectively with teachers. In effective consultation, therapists  fully understand that the goal is not to teach the teacher how to  implement therapy strategies. Nor is the goal of consultation to achieve  the therapist's goals for the child through the teacher or another  professional. The goal of consultation is for the therapist to support  the teacher in his or her teaching role, including helping children  achieve their IEP goals (Giangreco, Cloninger, & Iverson, 1998).  This focus suggests that in the role of consultant, the therapist  considers the teacher's needs to be a priority and focuses on supporting  his or her effectiveness in the classroom (Hanft, Rush, & Shelden,  2004). To enable teachers to provide instruction that matches the  abilities and needs of an individual child, the OT, PT, and SLP must  first understand the teacher's overall goals for all students and the  early childhood curriculum. In addition, the therapists must assess the  teacher's perception of the child, classroom management style, comfort  level with a child with special needs, and learning style and interests  (Hanft et al., 2004). The steps involved in effective consultation have  been conceptualized as (a) gaining an understanding of the teacher's  concerns and classroom context, (b) reframing the child's behaviors, (c)  using the teacher's learning and teaching style, (d) collaborating to  determine how strategies are implemented in the classroom, and (e)  collaborating to assess the effects of the strategies (Bundy, 2002a;  Hanft & Place, 1996). 
  Gaining an understanding of the teacher's concerns and classroom  context: What story am I in? The beginning point for successful  consultation is the teacher's concerns about the child. Often, the  teacher has identified performance problems that he or she feels  uncertain how to resolve or behavior problems that are interfering with  classroom management. The therapist should adopt the teacher's  priorities for the child (Bundy, 2002a). For example, if a child with  disabilities cannot participate in snack or communicate his needs, group  activities can become difficult for the teacher to manage. Although  participation in snack may not be the OT's and SLP's top priority,  providing consultation that helps to resolve the teacher's priorities  can enhance trust and rapport between the therapists and teacher. 
  Without a clear understanding of the preschool curriculum and the  classroom goals, therapists cannot provide consultative services that  meet the teacher's needs. OTs, PTs, and SLPs may not have training in  educational curriculum; therefore, they can enter the preschool  environment with minimal understanding of what story they are in (Bundy,  2002b). Training in the early childhood curriculum is not always easily  accessible for therapists; however, when therapists and teachers have  opportunities to meet and collaborate, teachers can share their lesson  plans with the therapists and introduce them to the curriculum. This  information will invite therapists to begin planning instruction with  teachers, to use curricular themes 
  in their intervention sessions, and to complement the early childhood  curriculum when they interact with individual students. This information  informs the therapist as to what the teacher expects of the students  and provides a context for understanding a teacher's view of the  student's performance. 
  Reframing the child's behaviors. To provide effective consultation,  therapists should begin with a thorough understanding of the teacher's  perception of the child and reasons for that perception. Teachers may be  frustrated with a child's behaviors or lack of participation and may  not understand the underlying reasons for those behaviors. At times,  teachers may believe that a child's actual ability is higher or lower  than his or her performance. When a child's behavior does not match the  teacher's expectations, teachers and family members may have a limited  understanding of the reasons for the behavior or performance. Therapists  can help teachers make sense of a child's performance. For example, the  SLP can help the teacher understand if a child's communication  impairments are due to a cognitive impairment, a sensory processing  disorder, oral apraxia, or auditory comprehension problems. A primary  role of the SLP becomes helping the teacher to reframe the child's  behaviors and to expand the teacher's understanding of why the child  demonstrates speech delays or difficulties (Nungesser & Watkins,  2005). With an understanding of the underlying cause for behavior, new  strategies to assist the child become appropriate and are likely to be  successful. 
  Although increasing understanding of the child's behavior can be  important, therapists also need to fully recognize and help resolve the  teacher's concerns. For example, knowing that a child has temper  tantrums daily because he does not have the expressive language skills  needed to communicate his needs does not immediately eliminate the  temper tantrums. Therefore, the explanation for the child's behavior  must be accompanied with practical, user-friendly strategies to resolve  the concern. Strategies that offer an immediate resolution to the  teacher's concerns and begin to resolve the causative factors promote  the consultative relationship. 
  Using the teacher's learning and teaching style. Consultation is only  effective if the teacher can assimilate and adapt the strategies offered  by the therapist so that they work in the classroom. The therapist  should ask the teacher how he or she learns best and then accommodate  the teacher's learning style (Hanft et al., 2004). It is best to offer  information in multiple ways and to use active learning principles. Many  teachers, like their students, learn best by doing. Therefore, it is  often best to offer a range of teaching strategies (e.g., the therapist  can model the strategy, allow the teacher to try the strategy, and then  give the teacher feedback). Handouts can provide teachers with  information about the disability or the intervention technique. When  equipment (e.g., Intellitools, augmentative communication devices) is  introduced into the classroom, it is important that the teaching staff  understand its purpose and how it works. Modeling and coaching are  helpful before expecting teachers to use the equipment, and continued  intermittent support is important. Follow-up is also important; that is,  therapists should regularly monitor the equipment use, adapt the  equipment as the child's performance changes, solve problems as they  arise, and reinforce the teacher's efforts to use the equipment. 
  Therapists should also consider the teacher's teaching style when  determining how to offer the consultation. Often, teachers are creative  and know how a strategy will best fit into the child's routine. Teachers  are most successful in adapting and applying the strategies recommended  by therapists when they thoroughly understand the rationale for, and  the goal of, the strategy. Teachers need to be comfortable with  interventions, and therapists should offer strategies that fit easily in  the classroom routine. 
  Collaborating to determine how strategies are implemented in the  classroom. Certain strategies to improve a child's behavior or  performance require environmental modifications or adjustments in the  classroom routine. For example, the child with sensory processing  disorder may benefit from low lighting or a quiet environment (Bundy  & Koomar, 2002). These changes will obviously affect all of the  students and may or may not be feasible to implement. Therapists'  recommendations that affect the classroom environment require high  levels of collaboration between teachers and therapists and would always  be the teacher's decision to implement or not (Pape & Ryba, 2004). 
  Sometimes, recommendations involve only the targeted child but may  affect his or her peers. For example, the therapist may recommend that a  child use headphones with music, sit on a therapy ball for table work,  or use the Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS; Bondy &  Frost, 1994) at circle time. These strategies are not as intrusive as  changes in lighting or room configuration; however, they require that  the child receive an intervention that is being denied to other  children. The teacher knows best how intervention methods will impact  the other students or affect the daily routine. The therapist and  teacher can work together to determine what interventions will benefit  the child and are least intrusive to the other students. 
  Collaborating to assess the effects of the strategies. When the  therapist asks the teaching staff to implement an intervention, the  teacher and therapist should negotiate who will evaluate the  intervention's effects on the child. Based on what effects are expected  and how quickly a change in performance is expected, the teacher or  therapist may be ideally suited to assess effects. It is the therapist's  responsibility to assess whether or not a recommended intervention is  effective or requires modification. With the mandate for increased  accountability, children's response to intervention must be documented  to inform decisions about ongoing intervention and level of service  (National Research Center on Learning Disabilities, 2005). These  assessment data inform the therapist's and teacher's decision to  continue, modify, or discontinue recommendations. 
  Flexible Service Delivery: How To Achieve Integrated Services 
  Young children with disabilities benefit when therapy is provided as  both direct and consultative services. Because children constantly  change, curricular demands increase, and the environment is dynamic,  frequent interactions between the therapist and the child are needed to  inform consultation and to enable the therapist to effectively  contribute to the child's educational program. With opportunities to  directly interact with the child and experience the classroom  environment, the OT, PT, and SLP can best support the child's  participation and the teacher's instruction. 
  Although the early childhood team recognizes that specialized services  need to be a combination of consultation and direct services, they tend  to categorize services as one or the other or to establish a rigid  pattern for weekly services (e.g., 30 min each week; Holland, 2007). In  part, these firm schedules are a result of the IEP process, which  requires documentation of the amount and model of service. However, more  fluid and dynamic models of service delivery are needed. In a fluid  model, therapy increases when naturally occurring events create a need,  as when the child obtains a new adapted device or has surgery or  casting, or even when a new baby brother creates added stress for a  family. Similarly, therapy services should be reduced when the child has  learned new skills that primarily need to be repeated and practiced in  his daily routine or the child reaches a plateau on her therapy related  goals. 
  What are the barriers to using flexible service delivery models? The  tight and busy schedules of early childhood professionals tend to make  them resistive to changing the established times for, and types of,  services (Holland, 2007). When caseloads are high and schedules are  tight, increasing the time on behalf of one child may diminish another  child's treatment time. Week-to-week schedules with specifically defined  blocks of time can allow therapists to settle into a routine that  minimizes decision making. 
  Although following the same week-to-week schedule has some advantages,  few educators believe that the child is best served when therapy  sessions are limited to 20 min per week (McWilliam, 1996). Several  models of service delivery that offer the possibility for greater  flexibility have been proposed (Carlin, 2007). Block scheduling  (Rainforth & York-Barr, 1997) and the 3-in-1 model (Annett, 2004)  are two examples of flexible scheduling that allow therapists to move  fluidly between direct and consultative services. In block scheduling,  therapists spend 23 hr in the early childhood classroom working with the  children with special needs one-on-one and in small groups while  supporting the teaching staff (Pape & Ryba, 2004; Stephens &  Tauber, 2005). Block scheduling allows the therapists to learn about the  classroom, develop relationships with the teacher, and understand the  curriculum so that they can design interventions that easily integrate  into the classroom. By being present in the classroom for an entire  morning or afternoon, the therapist can find natural learning  opportunities to work on a specific child's goals. Using the child's  self-selected play activity enables the therapist to use strategies that  are meaningful to the child, fit into his or her preferred activities,  and then are likely to be practiced. During the blocked time, the  therapist can run small groups (using a coteaching role; Cook &  Friend, 1991), coach the teacher and assistants (Rush, Sheldon, &  Hanft, 2003), evaluate the child's performance, and provide one-on-one  services. 
  In the 3-and-1 model (Annett, 2004), the therapist dedicates 1 week a  month to consultation and collaboration with the teacher, providing  services on behalf of the child rather than directly to the child. When  the IEP document states that a 3-and-1 therapy model will be used to  support the child's IEP goals, the parents, teacher, and administrators  are informed that one quarter of the therapist's time and effort for  that child will be dedicated to planning, collaborating, and consulting  for him or her. Stating that a 3-and-1 model will be used removes the  expectation that the therapist will provide one-on-one services for a  set number of minutes each week. It facilitates meeting and planning  time and legitimizes consultation time as important to the child's  progress as one-on-one services. For example, the week of indirect  service can also be spent creating new materials and adapted devices for  the child (e.g., an Intellikeys overlay to use with the curricular  theme of the month). Therapists can write "social stories" (e.g., Gray,  2003) for the child or program new vocabulary into the child's  augmentative communication device. 
  These examples of flexible service delivery models allow therapists and  teachers to make good choices as to how specialized services will be  provided to, and on behalf of, children with special needs. When the IEP  states that a range of services will be implemented according to the  changing needs of the child, communication and collaboration among  teachers and therapists become essential. Flexible models become  effective when teachers and therapists carefully monitor how the child  is progressing toward his or her goals and consistently communicate  about what specialized services will benefit the child. A fluid model  requires that therapists and teachers frequently assess whether or not  interventions are effective in order to determine when and if the  service delivery model should change. Flexible and dynamic models hold  promise when 
  * the planned range of services is clearly documented, 
  * services that are actually provided are clearly documented and  communicated, 
  * data on the child's response to intervention are obtained, documented,  and communicated. 
  Although flexible models may improve the effectiveness of specialized  services, they do not decrease cost, and the time commitment for  therapists and teachers remains unchanged. The 3-and-1 or other flexible  models of service delivery require the same or greater intensity of  assessment, documentation, and communication by teachers and therapists. 
  Decision Making About Service Delivery 
  To make decisions about what service delivery model is likely to be most  effective in serving the child and teacher and meeting the child's IEP  goals, clarity about the benefits and limitations of each model is  needed. The following case study provides an example of blended service  delivery and illustrates how service delivery decisions are made. 
  Application for a flexible service delivery model. Jasmine, who is 42  years of age, attends a neighborhood early childhood program with 3  children who have special needs and 3 typically developing peers. The  programis staffed by a teacher and a teaching assistant, and Jasmine  receives weekly OT, PT, and SLP services. Jasmine has cerebral palsy  with spastic quadriparesis. Although she has significant delays in all  developmental areas, her motor skills are markedly more delayed (8-month  level for gross motor and 15-month level for fine motor) than her  cognitive skills and receptive language (24- to 30-month level). Jasmine  has emerging pretend play skills that are limited to 1- to 2-step  pretend play schema. She prefers simple play actions such as hugging or  feeding a doll and does not demonstrate complex schema such as  pretending to be a nurse or teacher. 
  Jasmine's gross motor skills are significantly limited; she sits  independently but requires moderate assistance to stand. She recently  obtained a power wheelchair that she is learning to operate. She  requires assistance to transfer in and out of the chair. Her fine motor  skills are also limited; she can point and reach but is not always  accurate. 
  Jasmine feeds herself with an adapted spoon and some support at the  elbow. She manages to drink liquids with a long straw from a cup that is  latched to her wheelchair. The SLP is concerned that Jasmine frequently  chokes on thin liquids, but a recent video-fluoroscopic study indicated  no aspiration. Jasmine's speech is severely dysarthric and she  vocalizes few consonants. Her primary method for communication is  pointing to pictures to indicate her needs. 
  Jasmine's therapy needs cross multiple areas of function. Her OT and SLP  provide direct services and consultation to the teacher for feeding.  Her PT provides direct services and consultation regarding bathroom  independence and mobility. The SLP had initiated the use of a picture  board so that Jasmine could indicate basic needs and play interests. The  SLP recently expanded the choices on Jasmine's picture board to 12 and  feels that a more dynamic augmentative communicative device is needed.  Over the past year, the SLP has focused on improving Jasmine's speech  production; however, Jasmine has made minimal progress. 
  With multiple needs across all domains of function, the OT, PT, and SLP  provide once-a-week direct services at different classroom times to  continually assess Jasmine's skills, adapt their strategies, identify  methods to increase Jasmine's function, and practice emerging skills.  Their focus shifts from feeding to toileting, mobility, and  communication. 
  When the SLP suggested that an augmentative communication device would  increase Jasmine's communication and social participation, the therapy  team completed a comprehensive evaluation. The evaluation, which  included a trial of a couple of different devices, focused on  determining which device Jasmine could successfully use now and could  grow with her to meet the communication demands of a school environment.  To determine the features needed in an augmentative communication  device, the SLP assessed Jasmine's vocabulary, receptive and expressive  communication, social interaction, and cognitive function to determine  what software would be needed. The OT assessed Jasmine's visual motor  skills, visual perception, attention, and postural control to identify  the most appropriate access method. The SLP and OT synthesized their  findings and recommended a DynaVox V. Jasmine's family was able to find  funding to immediately purchase one. 
  Direct services. When the DynaVox Varrived, both the OT and the SLP  increased Jasmine's level of service to twice a week in order to ensure  that the device would be successfully integrated into the classroom. The  SLP programmed the device to match Jasmine's working vocabulary and  phrases that were used frequently in the preschool curriculum. The SLP  and OT used small-group activities with some one-on-one support to help  Jasmine learn the touch screen access and initiate interactions with her  peers. The therapists assessed Jasmine's ability to use the device in  her classroom, the bus waiting area, and the playground. For each of  these settings, the SLP developed pages with relevant vocabulary and  phrases, and the OT problem solved access issues to ensure that Jasmine  could reach, hold, and operate the device in and out of her wheelchair.  The SLP focused on optimizing Jasmine's ability to make requests,  express needs, and initiate interactions with adults and peers. 
  Consultation. Collaboration with the teacher and assistant was needed to  enable the success of Jasmine's use of the augmentative communication  device in the classroom. The goal of the OT and SLP consultation with  Jasmine's teachers was full integration of the DynaVox V into Jasmine's  social interactions. The questions that guided the therapists'  consultation included: & Where should the device be positioned for  Jasmine's best access? 
  * How can vocabulary be regularly updated so that it matches the  preschool lessons? 
  * What supports are needed to incorporate the DynaVox into Jasmine'  everyday routine? 
  * How will the device increase Jasmine's social participation and  communication and prepare her for entering kindergarten next year? 
  The SLP and OT collaborated with the teachers to determine how the  device would fit in a busy classroom environment. Together, they decided  where the device would be positioned for access, who would help Jasmine  access it during circle and snack time, and which peers could help her  use it. After implementing their ideas, the SLP and OT asked the  teachers for feedback and reinforced their efforts. 
  Benefits and limitations of this blended model of direct and  consultative services. The application of assistive technology provides a  useful example of how direct and consultative therapy services can be  integrated into the classroom. It also provides an example of when the  early childhood team implemented a time-limited increase in the amount  of specialized service. Direct therapy services are needed when  initiating a new approach or device or new learning goals. Consultation  and collaboration with the teaching staff are essential to making  decisions about how, when, and where a new approach or device will be  implemented. In this example, both direct and consultative related  services may decrease once the teaching staff becomes comfortable with  the augmentative communication device and the child reaches competence  in its use. 
  CONCLUSION 
  Early childhood therapists have made strides toward adopting flexible  service delivery models in which all therapy is integrated into the  classroom. These flexible models allow therapists to provide different  levels of consultation and direct service according to the child's  needs, the teacher's concerns, and changes in the environment. Fluid  models have the potential for providing the most appropriate level of  specialized services based on teachers' and children's potential to  benefit. One priority in using more fluid models is determining a method  for flexible scheduling so that more intense services do not detract  from another child's services. A second priority is communicating with  families so that they understand that when therapists use flexible  service delivery, their children are not losing services but are gaining  a more integrated and potentially effective program. Both priorities  can be met if the team engages in thoughtful, collaborative planning  when implementing flexible service delivery. Research studies on the  effectiveness of consultation and direct services with different types  of children and programs are needed. This research can help teams make  decisions about the levels and types of service that will optimally  benefit young children with disabilities
Sumber:Jurnal Fisioterapi