EVIDENCE BASED PRACTICES IN EARLY INTERVENTION

Keywords: EARLY INTERVENTION, TRANSDISCIPLINARY APPROACH, DISABILITY POLICIES, QUALITATIVE METHODOLOGY

Abstract

The Government of Republic of North Macedonia has made a commitment to
care and education for children with developmental delays by signing the Convention
on the Rights of the Child. Nevertheless, early intervention centres in North
Macedonia cannot always meet the preconditions and ease access and care for children
with developmental disabilities or delays. In the U.S. services for young children,
from birth to the 3rd birthday are called Early Intervention (EI) or Part C services.
Once the child turns three (and until 21), educational services are provided
under Part B of IDEA. EI focuses on family-centred services, individually planned
educational programs, and specialized teaching approaches.
The primary aim of the research was to explore the EI system in the States as
well as the implementation of policy into practice. The secondary goal was related to
identifying positive practices and policies that can be applied in an international
context. A qualitative study research methodology was used with a non-rigid and
naturalistic design. Qualitative content analysis was the research tool. This paper
contains a qualitative review of papers in the following areas: Historical trends in
EI; Current trends in EI; Models of service delivery; Transdisciplinary EI approach;
and Coaching of families within EI.

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Published
2019-12-16
How to Cite
Karovska Ristovska, A. (2019). EVIDENCE BASED PRACTICES IN EARLY INTERVENTION. Annual of the Faculty of Philosophy in Skopje, 72(1), 473-502. https://doi.org/10.37510/godzbo1972489kr