was successfully added to your cart.

All Posts By

admin

2009-12-09lillyfisher_9

Keeping The Baby in Mind

By | Newsletters | No Comments

Keeping the Baby in Mind

Our official magazine, keeping you in the loop with all the latest news and trending topics about infant mental health development.

Subscribe to all our magazines

The Hippo is Australia’s leading magazine for professional development opportunities for people working to promote infant mental health.

The Parent Educator is for medical, health, welfare and early childhood professionals working in parent education. Topics include industry updates, sector news, private practice and business resources, and self-care.

hippocampusii_gregdunn

The Hippo

By | Newsletters | No Comments

The Hippo

Professional development opportunities for people working to promote infant mental health.

View the Hippo online
The Hippo is a magazine of professional development, training and education opportunities for people who work with babies and their families.
People who work with babies and their families play a pivotal role in early mental health development, performing some of the most important work in the Australian community.
The Hippo is a publication that brings together a wide range of professional development and training opportunities to support this vital work in infant mental health promotion.
We also include professional development opportunities to support medical, health, early childhood and welfare professionals who work with families in private practice.
The Hippo cover image is excerpted (with permission) from an enamel on composition gold leaf artwork by Greg Dunn called Hippocampus II (2010). The hippocampus is part of the human brain helping to regulate emotion and memory. During infancy and early childhood, the hippocampus grows in size and develops in direct response to the level of nurturing and responsive interaction the baby experiences in her relationships.
Subscribe to all our magazines

Keeping the Baby in Mind is our official magazine, keeping you up to date with all the latest news and trending topics about infant mental health development.

The Parent Educator is for medical, health, welfare and early childhood professionals working in parent education. Topics include industry updates, sector news, private practice and business resources, and self-care.

Course Dates

By | Course Information Booklet | No Comments
Places are strictly limited to small class sizes, to allow for individualised attention to your learning needs.

NSW – Sydney

Venue: The Centre, 14 Francis St, Randwick, NSW.

VIC – Melbourne

Venue: Parent-Infant Research Institute, Heidelberg Hospital, 300 Waterdale Road, Heidelberg Heights, VIC, 3081. 

SA – Adelaide

Venue: Relationships Australia SA, 42A Orsmond St, Hindmarsh, SA, 5007

Next Sydney course:

Thu. 1st – Mon. 5th Dec 2016
(no class on Sun 4th Dec)

fewer than:

12
places remaining

Next Melbourne course:

Fri. 25th – Tue. 29th Nov 2016
(no class on Mon 28th Nov)

fewer than:

12
places remaining

Next Adelaide course:

Wed. 26th – Sun. 30th Oct 2016
(no class on Sat. 29th Oct)

fewer than:

12
places remaining

Other dates open for booking:

Sydney

Fri. 3rd – Mon. 6th March 2017: Enrol now
Fri. 19th – Tue. 23rd May 2017 (no class Sun. 21st): Enrol now

Other dates open for booking:

Melbourne

Sat. 18th – Wed. 22nd March 2017 (no class Mon 20th): Enrol now

Other dates open for booking:

Adelaide

Fri. 17th – Tue. 23rd Feb 2017 (no class Sun. 19th): Enrol now

WA – Perth

Venue: Ngala Family Centre, 275 Abernethy Road, Cloverdale, WA 6105.

QLD – Brisbane

Venue: Duchesne College, University of Queensland, College Rd., St. Lucia, QLD, 4067.

Next Perth course:

Thu. 3rd – Mon. 7th Nov 2016
(no class on Sun 6th Nov)

fewer than:

6
places remaining

Next Brisbane course:

Thu. 13th – Mon. 17th Oct 2016
(no class on Sun. 16th Oct)

fewer than:

9
places remaining

Other dates open for booking:

Perth

Thu. 16th – Sun. 19th Apr 2017: Enrol now

Other dates open for booking:

Brisbane

tbc

Music Licencing for Infant Massage Educators

By | Member Manual - Practice Management | No Comments

Music is an integral part of the First Touch Program -  and high-quality infant massage education generally. The use of nursery rhymes and singing is used to help support parent-infant interaction. Many educators also choose to use recorded music in their sessions - either as background music to help create a relaxed and supportive environment or as part of the activities in parent-baby groups. Recorded music is typically copyrighted material. This means the use of recorded music requires educators to ensure they comply with the relevant copyright laws.

You need to have an active subscription to view this content.

Copyright for Infant Massage Educators

By | Member Manual - Marketing | No Comments

Whether you are teaching infant massage in private practice or in paid employment, at one time or another you will probably want to use materials (such as photographs or writing) that has been produced by someone else, in your promotional activities. Most of these works will be protected by copyright. Any work that you create yourself, will also have copyright protection. Therefore, understanding some of the basic principles of copyright is essential if you are going to be publishing any sort of material – either on your own website, social media or even paper.

You need to have an active subscription to view this content.

Synopsis

By | Course Information Booklet | No Comments

The most important decision we can make is whether to believe we live in a friendly, or hostile, universe.

~Albert Einstein         

Answering this question is the primary goal of infancy: a period in which our view of the world, and our relationship to it, is being shaped.

For the baby, their parents are the beginning and end of their universe.

It is within the subtle, day-to-day interactions between a parent and baby that each of us comes to discover whether the world is, indeed, a friendly place or not.

Course synopsis.

Health, education and human service workers are increasingly interested in how we can best help shape the baby’s universe – their social, emotional, genetic and neurological development – in such a way that fosters the long-term mental health not only of individuals, but of communities.

While the interactions that take place in the parent-baby relationship are simple, often subtle, and sometimes even imperceptible, this does not mean they are inconsequential. From the infant’s perspective, responsive and sensitive touch, voice, movement and eye-contact are the neurological and developmental equivalent to the Big Bang. Studies spanning disciplines of neurobiology, medicine, psychology, sociology and even genetics all pinpoint high-quality parent-infant interactions as being the source of our developmental trajectories.

Despite the surface simplicity of parent-infant interactions – touch, movement, voice and eye-contact – many factors can interfere with a parent’s ability to provide this sort of friendly universe for their babies. This training program provides health workers with a simple, unique and effective tool for supporting these interactions in the practice environment via The First Touch Program.

Learning themes.

This training course consists of four-days face-to-face workshops, followed by a series of take-home activities and assignments. During this course, you will have the opportunity to explore a range of learning themese, including:

1) Rethinking infant massage

There is no question that infant massage is regarded as an enjoyable “soft” activity for parents and babies. Some researchers have also found that infant massage can have an impact on a range of isolated clinical outcomes: such as weight gain and brain activity. However, in general, the potential impact of infant massage education in promoting infant mental health and contributing to “hard” child development outcomes is generally under-estimated and often poorly articulated. Infant massage education is often frequently misunderstood and there are many examples of infant massage interventions being applied without critical reference to the research. Together we explore this history of infant massage in Australia. We then introduce the available research specifically concerned with how infant massage education works, for whom, and under what circumstances. This theme sets the scene for the remainder of the course, by inviting students to think critically about the context and framework of infant massage research and delivery of parent education.

2) Parent-infant interaction: The heart of attachment

A child’s attachment pattern, by definition is not consolidated until the age of around 2 or 3 years – yet the foundations for these patterns are established during the first year of life. How do we support or respond to something that we (and parents) cannot yet see or measure or fully experience? To do this, we must shift our attention from attachment as a goal, and more deeply understand the basic mechanisms of attachment during infancy:  touch, eye-contact, facial expression, movement and voice. We begin this session by introducing the key framework of the First Touch Program, based on the work of Vimala McClure. This simple 5-step framework is underpinned by a more complex assumption that attachment arises from the ways in which parents and babies use touch and other interactions to have a “conversation” with each other and, in turn, the shared meanings that parents and babies co-create through this conversation.

This realisation allows us to become un-stuck from our role as an “expert” whose job is to transfer “knowledge” to parents (via books, information, instruction, charts, diagrams, lists) about attachment. It opens up the space between the parent and baby, where we can more easily see and support the relationship as it gives shape to future attachment patterns. We then explore some ways in which this conversation might take place between parents and babies as they come to know each other and give meaning to their relationship. We also begin to consider where we might place ourselves in this space, and how this can influence the interaction between parents and babies and the meanings they create.

3) The authentic conversation

When a worker views secure attachment as their goal, they will naturally tend to focus on what a parent needs to do (or know) in order to “get attachment right”. In contrast, when we think about attachment simply as a future reflection of the parent-infant conversation, our role as facilitator shifts. We become more attuned to the ways that parents and babies “hear” each other…rather than being fixated on our opinion about what they “should be saying” to each other.

In this theme we work through some of the protocols and considerations that the facilitator uses to deliver the First Touch Program. These approaches enable us to support parent and baby in communicating more authentically and, in turn, to nurture the relationship between them.

The sessions within this theme are practical in nature, and provide students with the framework and activities for delivering the First Touch Program. These activities are underpinned by this premise that the role of the facilitator is not to direct the interaction. Rather we look at the activities through the lens of a facilitator who uses themselves and the environment to enable parent and baby to use touch, massage, voice and other interactions in an authentic and personal way to communicate with and “hear” the other.

4) The Baby-As-Teacher

The expression that the “parent is the expert” is frequently used, but we don’t often take the time to articulate what this means, nor to consider the actual pathway to engaging the parent’s expertise. What does parent expertise look like? Is it related to their knowledge? Skill? Intuition? Can the parent still be an expert without relevant knowledge, skill or awareness of their own intuition? How is their “expertise” gained? What do we do when a parent’s expertise conflicts with our professional knowledge about infant development and needs?

To overcome these (and other) difficulties with the parent-as-expert concept we need to consider the parent’s expertise in the broader context of their relationship with their baby. The topics in this theme  introduce the idea that the baby plays an active role in the development of their own parent’s expertise.

In the infant massage setting, the idea of parent-as-expert becomes far less problematic the more we can acknowledge and foster the baby’s role as the Teacher. We explore this by examining the ways that babies communicate: through their use of body language, body positions, body movements, eye contact, facial expressions, voice and skin. We explore the link between these expressions and their underlying neurological and emotional states. This session asks students to build their ability to notice these behaviours, and to extend their curiosity about what the baby might be teaching us. This allows us to more directly draw out the infant’s role as the teacher…and the parent as expert…within the infant massage setting.

5) Parent-Baby Classes 

These practical sessions provide students with the opportunity to observe and reflect on the delivery of the First Touch Program in relation to key themes explored so far.

Parents and babies join the class-room and participate in a modified/ abbreviated version of the First Touch Program over three days. The parent-baby groups are co-facilitated by the Trainer and the students, so students have the opportunity to practice and observe the program delivery and dynamics in a supported environment.

In these sessions, students are immersed in the real-life, spontaneous dynamics, interactions and communication occurring between the trainer, parents and babies during a First Touch Program. Following each of the parent-baby sessions, students participate in an in-depth review of theirs and their peers’ observations. Student observations and experiences are considered in the context of the function of parent-infant interaction, infant cues, the role of the Baby as Teacher and other key ideas explored so far.

6) Beginning as an Educator

Moving into independent practice can open many challenges and questions. Topics in this theme are designed to introduce students to some of frameworks and resources that can assist to navigate through these challenges as they arise. As well as exploring some of the legal and professional regulations that impact on parent educators, we also explore some of the methods and approaches that can be used by educators to engage parents and colleagues in the First Touch Program.

Content

By | Course Information Booklet | No Comments

The cue-based infant massage training provided by Baby in Mind, qualifies you to deliver education groups, that support and promote parent-infant interactions.

This course will equip you with the specific knowledge, skills and insights you need to deliver parent education programs in cue-based infant massage education to the national standards in delivering infant massage education to families.

You will be eligible to register with Baby in Mind as a parent educator, and to be licenced to deliver the First Touch Program to families.

The course covers a wide variety of content, and the course topics include:

Rethinking infant massage

History of infant massage in Australia
Mechanisms of high-quality infant massage education

Parent-infant communication

Talking with touch
The experience of touch
Relationship-based practice
Bonding and attachment

The authentic conversation

First Touch Program – 16 protocols and guidelines
Positioning and infant regulation
Environments to support parent-infant interactions
Supporting parent mindfulness
Oils
Infant massage routines – feet, legs, tummy, chest, arms, face, back
Gentle movements
Voice, singing, rhymes
Eye contact and facial expression
Massage for unsettled babies
Touch and the pre-term baby
Nesting and containment holds
Touch relaxation
Babies with additional needs
Adaptations for older children

The baby as teacher

Infant communication
Behavioural states
Infant cues, stress, reflexes and supporting parent sensitivity
Timing of massage
Infant crying, communication and emotion
Parent-baby group delivery
The Good Facilitator
Listening to the baby
Facilitating parent interactions
Reflection

Beginning as an educator 

Engaging parents (or colleagues) in the First Touch Program
Planning promotion and marketing
Documentation
Code of Conduct
Legal issues
Professional Networking

By completion of your course, you will be able to:

1) Use a relationship-based approach to promoting parent-infant mental and physical health.

2) Facilitate parents’ capacity to sensitively communicate with their babies and to respond to their needs through massage, stroking, other forms of respectful touch, and other responsive interactions.

3) Provide and promote infant massage education in a professional manner.

4) Respond to the individual differences and diversity of families in the context of infant massage education.

Session times

By | Course Information Booklet | No Comments
Session times: Face-to-face component

The face-to-face workshop component of the cue-based infant massage training is held over four days.

The program is intensive and content-heavy, and for this reason we offer the course in a variety of formats. Some courses are held over four days back-to-back. Some of our courses are spread out course over five days, with a day off during the course.

Sessions are held from 9am – 5pm, though most courses finish slightly earlier, particularly on the last day.

We strongly suggest that during the training program, you do not schedule other activities as there will be a small amount of preparation and review you will need to undertake between each day.

Time commitment: Self-directed/ take-home activities.

Following the four-day face-to-face training, you will have a series of take-home assignments to complete. These can be completed in a way and at times that suit your lifestyle and other commitments.

As a general guide, you should allow 100 – 130 hours to complete these activities. You have four months to submit these activities for assessment. You may request an extension if you require it (please see our information about extensions for more detail).

Live Feedback

By | Course Information Booklet | No Comments

If you have ever done any type of adult education course, you’ll know that most training providers ask for student feedback. They then keep the results of this feedback secret, in case it says anything bad. Most training providers avoid sharing any information that shows them in less than a positive light.

But Baby in Mind is very different.

We ask for student feedback and we publish the results of that feedback for everyone to see. 

Why? Because we truly believe that as both a training provider and a Charity, it’s good practice to be open and honest with people about our work. We believe that being transparent and accountable to our  students  (and potential students) helps show that – even in the rare situation where we get something wrong – we always take seriously, listen to and follow-up on every bit of student feedback that we receive.

This is the Live Feed from our student feedback database, with some of the key performance indicators we use to evaluate our work and student satisfaction. These are the up-to-date, pure, unadulterated results of feedback and evaluations completed by our students.

 ONLINE SHOP

All proceeds from items purchased via our online shop are used to support life-changing programs for infants and their families in the Australian community.

Go to Online Store >>