A new assessment tool that will help you promote young children's social-emotional development and support positive interactions
THE PRACTITIONER’S VIEW
Can you describe a program that has used SEAM and how that improved their work with parents?
One Part C early intervention program chose to use SEAM in the context of home visits and parent/toddler groups. Practitioners completed both the SEAM and SEAM Family Profile on home visits, through interviews with caregivers or by reviewing responses with caregivers after they had completed the tools on their own.
In the parent/toddler group, the practitioner introduced SEAM to the group and each caregiver completed it individually as they went through the items together. The early interventionists from this program really liked completing the SEAM and SEAM Family Profile through an interview format. Having the practitioner involved proved helpful in clarifying items, explaining examples, exploring concerns, and helping caregivers choose appropriate response options.
Early interventionists found the SEAM helped them open up conversations with families that might not otherwise have taken place and ask questions that helped identify areas in which families needed support.
As one practitioner stated:
It was a really nice forum for a conversation to learn more about the frequency [of certain behaviors]. Things were more intense than I had realized previously. I hadn’t really asked the right questions until I stepped through [the process of completing the SEAM].
The SEAM also helped early interventionists focus more intentionally on social routines and learn new information about children’s social skills.
Another practitioner commented:
I found some areas that I didn’t know were issues for families or where they were having difficult times. So it did help me guide the home visit piece of my service [and focus] more around the social routines … I found out really new information about their social skills, where it wasn’t a delay in social emotional development, but there [was] some sort of social functioning happening within the context of the family that I could help with.
Completing SEAM also helped early interventionists in this program explain to caregivers the importance of social-emotional development to other areas of development and give them examples of what their child’s social emotional skills and development might look like.
Finally, practitioners in this program used the SEAM Family Profile to help guide the development of meaningful family outcomes that were relevant to caregivers’ needs and concerns.