Interconnections Worldwide

Working internationally to share information, help build knowledge and support teamwork around babies, children and young people who are disabled, marginalised or vulnerable

The home of Team Around the Child (TAC) and the Multiagency Keyworker

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Scope Early Years Conference in Melbourne on the 6th - 7th September 2013

scope2melbThis conference will review best practice in early childhood intervention, how this best practice works in the real world and how it can be maintained with the National Disability Insurance Scheme. This conference will be of interest to early childhood intervention workers, managers and other early years professionals. There will be 50 sponsored places to the conference for parents to attend. We are excited that Peter Limbrick from the UK will be our keynote speaker and workshop presenter. Programme here. Register here.

Sleep Practitioner Training, October 2013, Birmingham, UK

sleep2As part of the Handsel Project's on-going sleep initiative to tackle sleep deprivation in families of children with disabilities, we are offering a two-day Sleep Practitioner Training workshop in central Birmingham on 7th and 8th October 2013. The workshop is for health professionals working with families of disabled children and is an introduction to the principles of sleep assessment and management.

 

The training will be especially useful to professionals new to this area of practice. It provides a sound knowledge of sleep theory and will equip professionals with the specialist skills to apply this knowledge to families of disabled children. Information here.

Tres Tres Fort – Brilliant CD from Staff Benda Bilili

staffbb3Staff Benda Bilili, who've been acclaimed by the likes of Africa Express and Damon Albarn are the latest phenomenon to come out of the Congo. A group of paraplegic street musicians who live in and around the grounds of the zoo in Kinshasa, they make music of astonishing power and beauty. The band's mesmerising grooves, overlaid with vibrant vocals , mix 70s funk, old Cuban son and mambo with the mellifluous flow of classic Congolese rumba that evoke the golden age of Franco.

 

Four veteran singer/guitarists sitting on spectacularly customized tricycles are the core of the band, backed by a younger, all-acoustic, rhythm section pounding out tight beats. Over the top of this are weird, infectious guitar-like solos performed by a 17 year-old prodigy on a one-string electric lute he designed and built himself out of a tin can. Available on Amazon – from where this text was taken.

 

One of the great global success stories of the past three years, Staff Benda Bilili have become an unstoppable force. A group of street musicians who used to live & play around the grounds of the zoo in Kinshasa, Congo, they make music of astonishing power and beauty. The band’s mesmerising rumba-rooted grooves, overlaid with vibrant vocals and extraordinary tin-can guitar solos, have been dazzling audiences and media the world over, on record, on stage and on the big screen.

The causes of challenging behaviour and how to make effective plans to reduce it – information sheets

The Challenging Behaviour Foundation has developed a series of three information sheets which look at the causes of challenging behaviour, and explain how to make effective plans to reduce challenging behaviour. The information is designed for families or professionals who support a child or adult with severe learning disabilities whose behaviour challenges. Please click on the links below to access the information sheets. 



Understanding Challenging Behaviour (part 1)

Finding the Causes of Challenging Behaviour (part 2)

Positive Behaviour Support Planning (part 3)

 

Visit the Challenging Behaviour Foundation here.

share your information  Cartoon © Martina Jirankova-Limbrick 2011