Lisa,
I'm actually a trained teacher, and have conducted Government paid research
into effective teaching in all sorts of classroom settings, so I have a few
general tips. I'd also be happy to discuss in email any specific types of
lesson proforma that enoucourages student interaction and autonomy: people
learn best when the are doing! How they 'do' is dependent on who they
are, and what you're trying to achieve.
Basic tips include: decide exactly what you want everyone in the room to
come away with as a baseline: something clear and simple that can be
achieved and retained by everyone - no matter their start point. Most
students, in any set up, are lucky to retain 10% of any
lesson/talk/discussion. So concentrate hard on less: most people try to do
too much!
I'd consider something like: "The baby needs its mother first and foremost"
as a basline, with an extension of "It's my job as staff to get out of the
way of the mother and baby" or "It's my job to get the mother and baby
together fast". You want everyone in the room to come out with the baseline
message in their heads, and about 40% of the room to come out with the
extended message in place too! If you manage that - you're winning big
style!
The human brain needs to revise/repeat information 5 times before a neural
pathway is made that allows them access back to it. So you should build in
a five point repeat on your baseline info. They should see it written, hear
it spoken, and prefarably turn to each other and discuss it themselves. If
they do all three of these things, just mentioning it again, or seeing it
again, should be enough that most will remember it.
Once you have your baseline messages decided, you can build up a slightly
more complex message within the talk you set up - for those who 'get' the
baseline faster. So you can expand, but also restate, the baseline.
Always start with a hook! Always finish with a summery! Humour works to
both break up info, and to wake up brain cells - try not to go more than 12
minutes without a joke, visual funny or an anecdote that lighens up the
mood. If they are laughing, they are listening.
In terms of the message you are getting over, and that fact it's what could
be termed a 'hostile' audience (either not prepared enough for new
information that challenges assumptions, or listening to something they've
already decided is not important or relevant) try to start with them. And
turn the 'argument' on its head - dispense with it, and go straight for the
main crux of the matter: the baby and its needs.
So, for instance, I'd ask them to think for a moment on what a healthy
newborn needs most in the first five minutes of life. Then get them to turn
to each other, and tell the person next to them their thoughts, and give
them a few moments to discuss it. Then ask for them to tell _you_ what has
been said, and you write it down on a board.
Within five minutes, you'll have everything you need for an entire series of
talks!
Once you've established what the needs are - oxygen, heat, fluids, etc...
shift into a discussion of the needs of a newborn in the first few hours.
And then start to discuss how the mother can provide all these needs, and
how the staff can help the mother support the baby's needs So you get to
skin to skin, heat contact... and then human milk. (I'd not use
'breastmilk' - it sets it's self up in opposition to 'formula' the second it
is used. 'Breastfeeding' is okay as a description of what the mother is
doing, but if terms of what's going into the baby, I'd stick to 'human
milk'. "The baby needs... and that's what human milk is designed to do
exactly" With newborns, you can get round all this by always talking about
colostrum! )
So for instance, you can say something like "Newborns need skin to skin to
regulate not just heat, but blood sugar,, and placed on the mother's body
directly after birth, it will not only snuggle into her, but many will start
to lick colostrum" or somesuch statement. Basically, you're matching the
needs they have identified for you, with what the _mother_ provides, not the
nursing staff.
When you've fully established the needs of the infant, and how the mother
fulfills them by both sustained contact and feeding the baby milk, you can
then move onto the statement about "if there are problems with not feeding
the baby human milk - for instance, if the mother has chosen ahead of time
not to feed the baby herself... and then discuss how those infant needs can
be met with artificial feeding. You can match the 'needs' you have
established, with how you have to meet those needs differently if human
milk/ the mother is lacking. This imemdiately puts you into discussing
'extra' work and 'extra caution'.
So, for instance, you've established that skin to skin is important for a
newborn to regulate temperature - so you can state if the baby is being
bottle fed, then the baby needs to have the same skin to skin - but careful
control over the bottle must be applied in order to prevent 'flooding' the
baby. Once you've identified the 'natural' pathway, you're automatically
discussing how to overcome problems that rise from not following the baby's
basic needs. Again, for instance, if you've established earlier that
newborns only need a little fluid and sugars from colostrum, you can then
talk about the 'problem' of making sure only a little is given from bottles
at this time, as formula is not colostrum, and babies don't need much fluid
at this time.
So... to recap ;-)... you are presenting the needs of the baby, how mother
and her milk fulfills these needs, and identifying extra caution points of
the needs being met effectively if the mother has chosen not to give the
baby her own milk.
There are loads of things you might want to say, but remember the first tip:
less is more!
On the 'dangers' of formula, I've found that a counter-productive term.
People immediately react to you saying a baby is in danger. I've started to
experiment with the word 'injury', and it's something less challenging, and
more 'fixable'. So, for instance, I can talk about how Crying It Out might
injure a small baby, and how much hard work is then needed by to heal that
injury. So, to transfer it to the bottle feeding scenario... "Too much
formula, too quickly can injure the newborn in a way difficult to see. Its
poor little stomach gets blown and bloated, and when it cries in pain,
everyone says - newborn's cry. How uncomfortable are you after a huge
Christmas dinner?" That sort of thing.
Finally, there are several cheap and easy ways to make the audience take
part without dealing with that awesome silence as you ask for an opinion.
The simplest method I've found, is a piece of paper on each seat, with "No"
on one side and "Yes" on the other. (or "I agree" and "I disagree"). Then,
when you prep the audience, you ask questions, and they raise the paper..
"Do you think babies need their mothers?" (Everyone will raise "Yes")
"Do you think mothers need their babies?" (panic will ensue!)
I've been considering a 'traffic light' set on this - three pieces of paper
- red, green and orange. Green for yes, red for no, orange for "I'm not
sure". If you've already got them to turn and talk to each other, the most
hesitant of audiences will use the paper comment ... one will go up, then
another few, and if you wait, the whole room will follow.
As a hook... how about walking into the room with a crying baby sound
playing, and place a doll covered in vaseline on a towel on the desk in
front of you. Ask the audience what you need to do for the crying baby who
is ten seconds old? :-) When you come to summary, get the doll back out,
and hold it against you, quiet and fulfilled: its needs met. :-)
Sorry if this is a huge information dump. ;-) I've been thinking hard on
this for quite some time.... Obviously, the examples I've given, aren't
meant to reflect what topics you may choose to teach! I guess what I'm
saying (my own baseline) is that how you structure the information and the
activites, will do more towards establishing the 'norm' than how you talk
about the issues themselves.
But do let me recap once more! (that means I've done it three times!)
Start with the baby's immediate needs and hand that over to the audience to
feed back on.
Outline how a mother fulfills these needs, and how staff can help get them
together effectively.
Discuss the challenges to the staff when dealing with a mother who chooses
not to meet the baby's needs naturally. This allows you to openly discuss
problem with aritficial feeding methods in context of a professional's role
in mother-baby support.
Summarise with the baby's needs being met - and how proud the staff can be
in helping achieve that!
As I said, more than happy to go to email to help with your exact objectives
and audience.
Oh dear.. gone off on one, haven't I? Oops... I'll just go skulk in the
corner....
Morgan Gallagher
Online Lactaneer
Garrulous Woman
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