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EDUCATIONAL HELPS ...
The Individual Family Service Plan (IFSP)
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A publication of The ERIC Clearinghouse on
Disabilities and Gifted Education
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ERIC EC Digest #E605
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December 2000
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Author: Mary Beth Bruder
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Approx. 6 pages when printed.
An Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP)
documents and guides the early intervention process
for children with disabilities and their families.
The IFSP is the vehicle through which effective early
intervention is implemented in accordance with Part C
of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
(IDEA). It contains information about the services
necessary to facilitate a child's development and
enhance the family's capacity to facilitate the
child's development. Through the IFSP process,
family members and service providers work as a team
to plan, implement, and evaluate services tailored to
the family's unique concerns, priorities, and
resources.
According to IDEA, the IFSP shall be in writing and
contain statements of
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the child's present levels of physical
development, cognitive development, communication
development, social or emotional development, and
adaptive development.
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the family's resources, priorities, and
concerns relating to enhancing the development of
the child with a disability;
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the major outcomes to be achieved for the child and
the family; the criteria, procedures, and timelines
used to determine progress; and whether
modifications or revisions of the outcomes or
services are necessary;
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specific early intervention services necessary to
meet the unique needs of the child and the family,
including the frequency, intensity, and the method
of delivery;
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the natural environments in which services will be
provided, including justification of the extent, if
any, to which the services will not be provided in
a natural environment;
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the projected dates for initiation of services and
their anticipated duration;
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the name of the service provider who will be
responsible for implementing the plan and
coordinating with other agencies and persons; and
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steps to support the child's transition to
preschool or other appropriate services.
U.S. Department of Education rules (1993) require
that non-Part C services needed by a child, including
medical and other services, are also described in the
IFSP, along with the funding sources for those
services. The statute allows parents to be charged
for some services. If a family will be charged, this
should be noted in the IFSP.
How the IFSP Differs from the
IEP
The IFSP differs from the IEP in several ways:
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It revolves around the family, as it is the family
that is the constant in a child's life.
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It includes outcomes targeted for the family, as
opposed to focusing only on the eligible child.
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It includes the notion of natural environments,
which encompass home or community settings such as
parks, child care, and gym classes. This focus
creates opportunities for learning interventions in
everyday routines and activities, rather than only
in formal, contrived environments.
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It includes activities undertaken with multiple
agencies beyond the scope of Part C. These are
included to integrate all services into one plan.
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It names a service coordinator to help the family
during the development, implementation, and
evaluation of the IFSP.
Steps that Lead to Effective
IFSPs
Identify Family Concerns,
Priorities, and Resources. The family's
concerns, priorities, and resources guide the entire
IFSP process. Early intervention should be seen as a
system of services and supports available to families
to enhance their capacity to care for their children.
The notion of partnership between the intervention
team and the family must be introduced and nurtured
at this beginning point of the IFSP process.
Identify the Family's Activity
Settings. All children develop as the result of
their everyday experiences. It is important to
document valued, enjoyable routines (bath time,
eating, play activities, etc.) and analyze them to
see if they offer the sustained engagement that leads
to learning opportunities. Likewise, it is important
to identify the community activity settings (e.g.,
child care, gymboree, swimming) that provide
opportunities for learning.
Conduct a Functional
Assessment. An effective assessment process
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addresses the family's questions about
enhancing their child's development, focusing
on each family member's concerns and priorities
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collects information for a specific purpose, for
example, the evaluation conducted by the early
interventionist at the beginning of the IFSP
process determines if the child is eligible for
services
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reflects a complete and accurate picture of the
child's strengths, needs, preferences for
activities, materials, and environments
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has a person familiar to the child conduct
observations and other assessments in settings
familiar to the child (e.g., home, outdoor play
area, child care program)
Collaboratively Develop Expected
Outcomes. After assessment information is
collected, the team meets to review the information
and the family's concerns, priorities, and
resources to develop statements of expected outcomes
or goals. Active family involvement is essential.
Collaborative goals focus on enhancing the
family's capacity and increasing the child's
participation in valued activities.
Assign Intervention
Responsibilities. After outcomes are identified,
the early intervention team assigns responsibilities
for intervention services that support those
outcomes. An IFSP requires an integrated, team
approach to intervention. Using a transdisciplinary
team model is one method of integrating information
and skills across professional disciplines. In the
transdisciplinary model, all team members (including
the family) teach, learn, and work together to
accomplish a mutually agreed upon set of intervention
outcomes. Individuals' roles are defined by the
needs of the situation rather than by the function of
a specific discipline.
In a transdisciplinary model, one or a few people are
primary implementers of the program. Other team
members provide ongoing direct or indirect services,
such as consultation. For example, an occupational
therapist can observe a toddler during meals, then
recommend to the parent how to physically assist the
child.
Identify Strategies to Implement the
Plan. This step involves working closely as a
team to increase learning opportunities, to use the
child's surroundings to facilitate learning, to
select the most effective strategies to bring about
the desired outcomes, and identify reinforcers that
best support the child's learning. Implementation
may involve a toddler participating in a library
story hour one afternoon a week; a physical therapist
showing family members how to use adaptive equipment;
or a service coordinator completing the paperwork to
pay for a child's transportation from his or her
home to needed services.
Intervention strategies should help promote
generalization of outcomes—i.e., the child
performs new skills in a variety of environments
after intervention has ended. For example, both
service providers and family members can encourage a
child to request desired objects (e.g, toys) with
gestures in numerous environments (e.g., home,
playgroup, child care).
Interventions should target several outcomes during
one activity. When a child participates in an
activity, he or she uses a variety of skills from a
number of developmental areas. For example, during
mealtimes, a toddler may use communication skills to
request more juice, fine motor skills to grasp a
spoon, a social skills to interact with a sibling.
Intervention strategies should help a child become
more independent in his or her world. The selected
strategies might involve offering physical assistance
during mealtimes, prompting the correct response
during a self-care routine, or providing simple
pull-on clothing to enable a child to dress without
assistance.
Interventions provided within natural environments
should look like a "typical activity." For
instance, a child learning to develop her fine motor
skills should be encouraged to color, draw pictures,
play with puzzles, build with blocks, pick up her
toys, use eating utensils, play finger games, etc.
Ideally, interventions should
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Be embedded in everyday natural environments.
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Emphasize the acquisition of functional
competencies.
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Make it possible to increase a child's
participation within the environments.
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Include both social and non-social activities
Evaluate Early Intervention to
Ensure Quality
Both ongoing and periodic evaluations are essential
to any early intervention program. An evaluation may
focus on a child's progress toward obtaining
desired outcomes and upon the quality of the
intervention program itself. Ongoing monitoring of
the child's progress requires keeping records in
a systematic manner in order to answer such critical
questions as
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To what extent and at what rate is the child making
progress toward attaining outcomes?
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Are the selected intervention strategies and
activities promoting gains in development?
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Do changes need to be made in the intervention
plan?
Periodically reviewing the IFSP provides a means of
sharing results about the child's progress and
integrating these results into the plan. Part C of
IDEA requires that the IFSP be evaluated and revised
annually and that periodic reviews be conducted at
least every six months (or sooner if requested by the
family). This ongoing process provides a continual
support to the family and child as they realize their
own strengths and resources to help their child
learn.
Resources
Brown, W., Thurman, S.K., & Pearl, L.F. (1993).
Family centered early intervention with infants and
toddlers:innovative cross-disciplinary approaches.
Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co.
Division for Early Childhood. (1993). DEC recommended
practices: Indicators of quality in programs for
infants and young children with special needs and
their families. Reston, VA: The Council for
Exceptional Children.
Lerner, J.W., Lowenthal, B., and Egar, R. (1998).
Preschool children with special needs. Needham
Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon.
Zhang, C. & Bennett, T. (2000). The IFSP/IEP
process: Do recommended practices address culturally
and linguistically diverse families? (CLAS Technical
Report #10). Champaign, IL: University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, Early Childhood Research Institute
on Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate
Services.
ERIC Digests are in the public domain and may be
freely reproduced and disseminated, but please
acknowledge your source. This digest was prepared
with funding from the Office of Educational Research
and Improvement (OERI), U.S. Department of Education,
under Contract No. ED-99-CO-0026. The opinions
expressed in this publication do not necessarily
reflect the positions or policies of OERI or the
Department of Education.
The ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities and Gifted
Education (ERIC EC)
The Council for Exceptional Children
1110 N. Glebe Rd.
Arlington, VA 22201-5704
Toll Free: 1.800.328.0272
E-mail:
ericec@cec.sped.org
Internet:
http://ericec.org/
Copyright © 2007 ASGC. All rights
reserved.
Autism Society of Greater Cleveland
P.O. Box 41066, Brecksville, Ohio 44141 (216)
556-4937
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