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Supporting
Family Economic Well-Being through Home Visiting (HomeEc)
 
	The HomeEc team will use this guide to:
	
		- Learn
		about the home visiting programs participating in the formative
		evaluation 
		 
- Understand
		the need each program will focus on for the formative evaluation 
- Design a
		solution to address the need and determine how to implement and
		test the solution in iterative learning cycles 
- Review the
		findings from each learning cycle and determine next steps 
- 
		 
- 
		Note: This is a guide, not a script.
		Facilitators will tailor the guide for the program, the phase of
		the evaluation, and the mix of staff we expect to attend the
		meeting. Facilitators can refer to Table 1 for objectives for each
		meeting. Facilitators will tailor questions in Table 2 to the
		specific program and add probes to explore the experiences and
		perspectives of meeting participants. 
		 
- 
		The strategic planning meetings are meant to be collaborative
		discussions between the HomeEc team and program staff.  During
		these meetings, program staff will contribute their knowledge and
		expertise of their program’s unique circumstances and the
		caregivers they work with, and the HomeEc facilitators will
		contribute information learned from available research and
		evidence. During the discussions, the HomeEc facilitators will
		probe, follow-up, and clarify questions and responses as
		appropriate. The HomeEc facilitators may use human-centered design
		activities during the meetings to provide staff with an interactive
		way to answer the questions. 
- 
		 
DISCUSSION GUIDE FOR STRATEGIC
PLANNING MEETINGS
A. 	Introduction and Informed Consent
Thank you for
joining us today. Today’s meeting will focus on [objectives(s)
from Table 1]. The meeting will last about 90 minutes. Your
participation to the meeting is voluntary. Being part of this meeting
is up to you, and it will have no consequences if otherwise. [If
applicable: We will use an online whiteboard called Mural
(https://mural.co/) to facilitate today’s activities and
discussion. Mural allows everyone to participate anonymously. There
are no right or wrong answers to our questions; you only have to
share information you want to share, and you don’t have to
answer any questions you don’t want to answer. Information
you provide during these meetings will not affect your home visiting
grant. There
are no direct benefits and no risks associated with participation in
the study. The information you share will be kept private to the
extent permitted by law, except if you say something that suggests
you are very likely to harm yourself, that you are planning to hurt
another person or child, or that someone is likely to harm you. The
information will be used to help decide the next steps for the
formative evaluation in your program. We might summarize the
information in a public final report on what we learn; however, we
will not use any of your names in our reports. If you want more
information or have questions about the study or your privacy rights,
you can call the project director, Katie Eddins at 202-838-3614. 
Do you agree
to participate in this discussion? [Obtain verbal consent from
each person individually]
Do you have
any questions before we get started?
Great, let’s
start with a recap of our last meeting and what has happened since we
last met. [Insert recap here.]
Facilitator
note: Customize this discussion guide ahead of the meeting
based on your current understanding of the program, the objectives
for the meeting, and activities and questions you will use to
facilitate the discussion. Refer to Table 1 for possible objectives
and Table 2 for guiding questions for each meeting. 
Table
1. Meeting objectives and outputs, based on status in the formative
evaluation process 
	
	
	
	
		| 
			Objectives | 
			Output | 
			Number
			of meetings per site | 
	
		| Create
				a shared understanding of program’s goals and its current
				services to support participants’ economic well-beingClarify
				motivations for changeIdentify
				the specific challenges involved in providing services that
				support economic well-being 
				Explore
				root causes and effects of challenges
 | 
			Potential
			focal need to address | 
			1 | 
	
		|  | 
			Prioritized
			list of practices to address need | 
			1 | 
	
		| Create
				a shared understanding of plans to  implement the selected
				practice, including: 1) the people that will implement the
				practice; 2) processes and policies to support the practice; 3)
				products, tools or resources needed to support the practice; and
				4) principles that will guide proper implementation 
				Create
				a shared understanding of plans to test the practice, including
				information collection plans for  who will collect the
				information, how will it be collected, and how it will be
				analyzed and used
 | 
			Implementation
			and testing plans | 
			1 | 
	
		| Review
				findings from the learning cycle by sharing findings with
				relevant staff and discussing the implications for the practiceCreated
				a shared understanding of next steps for implementing the
				practice, such as if program intends to maintain or scale the
				practice, adapt it and test it again, or abandon the practice
 | 
			Plan
			for next steps for practice | 
			Up
			to 3 | 
Table
2. Guiding questions for meetings
	
	
		
			| 
				Guiding
				question for meetings | 
		
			| 
				Meeting
				1: Identify potential focal need to address | 
	
	
		
			| What
					do we do well as a program to support economic well-being for
					the families we serve? [Or, if program doesn’t currently
					address family economic well-being: What are your goals in
					supporting economic well-being within your home visiting
					program?]
 | 
	
	
		
			| What
					are the challenges in what we are currently doing to support
					family economic well-being?  [Or, if program doesn’t
					currently address family economic well-being: What family
					economic well-being needs should the program address?]
 | 
	
	
		
			| What
					opportunities are there to improve our services to support
					economic well-being? 
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| What
					economic well-being need(s), challenge(s), or opportunity(ies)
					for growth is/are highest priority to address? 
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| How
					does the need affect the people involved (home visitors, program
					staff, families)? Why is it important?
 | 
	
	
		
			| What
					root causes contribute to the need? 
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| What
					are the consequences and effects resulting from this need (for
					the program and/or participants)? What are the benefits (for
					families, home visiting staff, the program) if we can overcome
					the need?
 | 
	
	
		
			| Of
					the root causes and effects that the program could influence,
					which are most important to address? Which of them are within
					your home visiting program’s control?
 | 
	
	
		
			| 
				Meeting
				2: Brainstorm and prioritize practices to address focal need | 
	
	
		
			| Reflecting
					on our last discussion about what the program does well,
					challenges, and opportunities to improve, how might we address
					[focal need identified in previous meeting]?
 | 
	
	
		
			| What
					practice(s) can we create or adapt to address the need we chose?
					
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| How
					might each practice help families improve their economic
					well-being? (For example, meet and sustain basic human needs,
					have present and future financial security, gain control over
					financial decisions, and/or achieve security and satisfaction in
					employment) 
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| What
					practices are the highest priority? (Probes: Consider likelihood
					of success, target priority outcomes for families, practices
					staff are most motivated to try, etc.)
 | 
	
	
		
			| How
					might we structure the practices (for example, the tool and
					delivery method) to limit additional burden and stress on home
					visitors, other program staff, partner staff, and/or
					participants? 
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| How
					can we use research and evidence (such as home visiting
					research, behavioral science, or implementation science) to
					inform the design of these practices? (The
					HomeEc team will provide information about available research
					and evidence relevant to the practice.)
 | 
	
	
		
			| 
				Meeting
				3: Create implementation and testing plan | 
	
	
		
			| Who
					will implement the practice, how often, and with whom? 
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| How
					will the program build its knowledge and capacity to implement
					the practice well? What tools or resources (such as manuals,
					supervision, or coaching) are needed to support implementers?
 | 
	
	
		
			| What
					is the plan for testing the practice in this learning cycle? (By
					learning cycle, we mean the process where staff and/or
					caregivers try using the practice and provide feedback on it
					over a short period of time.) When will the test start and end? 
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| What
					data will be collected during the test? How can data collection
					be integrated into the design of the practice? How will the data
					be collected? Who will collect them? 
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| Can
					we leverage any existing data collection efforts during the
					test? If so, how will we incorporate this data into the test?
 | 
	
	
		
			| How
					will we review data collected during the test? How often? Who
					will be included in the review?
 | 
	
	
		
			| How
					will we share data collected during the test with other
					important audiences? Who are those audiences?
 | 
	
	
		
			| Who
					will oversee the test and make sure it is executed as planned?
 | 
	
	
		
			| 
				Meetings
				4-6: Review findings and discuss next steps | 
	
	
		
			| What
					worked well in the implementation of the practice? What was
					challenging? 
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| Did
					staff implement the practice with fidelity to the implementation
					plan and training? 
					
 | 
	
	
		
			| How
					did families receive the practice? Did they understand its
					purpose and how to use it?
 | 
	
	
		
			| How
					well did staff think that training and associated supports
					prepared them to implement the practice?
 | 
	
	
		
			| Did
					staff have enough support to implement the practice? If not,
					what other supports would be useful? Were any of the supports
					provided during the test unnecessary? (If yes, explain.)
 | 
	
	
		
			| How
					could we improve the practice’s implementation going
					forward? What do staff suggest improving about the practice? How
					do families suggest improving it?
 | 
	
	
		
			| What
					are our next steps with the practice (for example, tweak its
					implementation and test it again)?
 | 
	
	Paperwork
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| File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document | 
| Author | Margaret Sanderson | 
| File Modified | 0000-00-00 | 
| File Created | 2024-10-07 |