“I'm thrilled that you see that”: guiding parents to see success in interactions with children with deafness and autistic spectrum disorder

Children with deafness who are also on the autistic spectrum are a group with complex support needs. Carers worry about their ability to communicate with them, and are often uncertain about what constitutes ‘good’ communication in this context. This paper analyses the use of a therapeutic interventi...

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Main Authors: Pilnick, Alison, James, Deborah
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33210/
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author Pilnick, Alison
James, Deborah
author_facet Pilnick, Alison
James, Deborah
author_sort Pilnick, Alison
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Children with deafness who are also on the autistic spectrum are a group with complex support needs. Carers worry about their ability to communicate with them, and are often uncertain about what constitutes ‘good’ communication in this context. This paper analyses the use of a therapeutic intervention, Video Interaction Guidance (VIG), which originates in developmental psychology and focuses on the relational foundations of communication. We draw on a single case using an ethnomethodological/conversation analytic framework, and in particular Goodwin’s (1994) work on ‘professional vision’, to show how the ability to see ‘success’ is a socially situated activity. Since what counts as success in this setting is often far removed from everyday ideas of good communication, how guiders facilitate particular ‘ways of seeing’ are critical for both the support of carers and the impact of the intervention. We argue that this work has implications in three areas: for the practice of VIG itself; for the role of qualitative, interactional research addressing the way in which interaction-based interventions are protocolised, enacted and assessed; and for the way in which expertise is conceptualised in professional/client interactions in health and social care.
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spelling nottingham-332102020-05-04T16:39:36Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33210/ “I'm thrilled that you see that”: guiding parents to see success in interactions with children with deafness and autistic spectrum disorder Pilnick, Alison James, Deborah Children with deafness who are also on the autistic spectrum are a group with complex support needs. Carers worry about their ability to communicate with them, and are often uncertain about what constitutes ‘good’ communication in this context. This paper analyses the use of a therapeutic intervention, Video Interaction Guidance (VIG), which originates in developmental psychology and focuses on the relational foundations of communication. We draw on a single case using an ethnomethodological/conversation analytic framework, and in particular Goodwin’s (1994) work on ‘professional vision’, to show how the ability to see ‘success’ is a socially situated activity. Since what counts as success in this setting is often far removed from everyday ideas of good communication, how guiders facilitate particular ‘ways of seeing’ are critical for both the support of carers and the impact of the intervention. We argue that this work has implications in three areas: for the practice of VIG itself; for the role of qualitative, interactional research addressing the way in which interaction-based interventions are protocolised, enacted and assessed; and for the way in which expertise is conceptualised in professional/client interactions in health and social care. Elsevier 2013-12-01 Article PeerReviewed Pilnick, Alison and James, Deborah (2013) “I'm thrilled that you see that”: guiding parents to see success in interactions with children with deafness and autistic spectrum disorder. Social Science & Medicine, 99 . pp. 89-101. ISSN 0277-9536 United Kingdom; autistic spectrum disorder; hearing impairment; video interaction guidance; ethnomethodology; conversation analysis; qualitative research; ‘professional vision’ http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.10.009 doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.10.009 doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.10.009
spellingShingle United Kingdom; autistic spectrum disorder; hearing impairment; video interaction guidance; ethnomethodology; conversation analysis; qualitative research; ‘professional vision’
Pilnick, Alison
James, Deborah
“I'm thrilled that you see that”: guiding parents to see success in interactions with children with deafness and autistic spectrum disorder
title “I'm thrilled that you see that”: guiding parents to see success in interactions with children with deafness and autistic spectrum disorder
title_full “I'm thrilled that you see that”: guiding parents to see success in interactions with children with deafness and autistic spectrum disorder
title_fullStr “I'm thrilled that you see that”: guiding parents to see success in interactions with children with deafness and autistic spectrum disorder
title_full_unstemmed “I'm thrilled that you see that”: guiding parents to see success in interactions with children with deafness and autistic spectrum disorder
title_short “I'm thrilled that you see that”: guiding parents to see success in interactions with children with deafness and autistic spectrum disorder
title_sort “i'm thrilled that you see that”: guiding parents to see success in interactions with children with deafness and autistic spectrum disorder
topic United Kingdom; autistic spectrum disorder; hearing impairment; video interaction guidance; ethnomethodology; conversation analysis; qualitative research; ‘professional vision’
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33210/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33210/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33210/