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Roles and capacities of Thai family development centres

Warunsicha Supprasert, David Hughes, Piyatida Khajornchaikul

Journal of Children's Services, Volume: 13, Issue: 3/4, Pages: 110 - 121

Swansea University Author: David Hughes

Abstract

Thai family development centres are community organisations, staffed mainly by volunteers, that support families who are encountering problems. This includes supporting families of children subject to language acquisitions problems - the focus of this paper. The paper considers both the main areas o...

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Published in: Journal of Children's Services
ISSN: 1746-6660
Published: 2018
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa44646
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first_indexed 2018-09-27T18:59:23Z
last_indexed 2020-10-20T02:55:53Z
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spelling 2020-10-19T12:55:16.0082886 v2 44646 2018-09-27 Roles and capacities of Thai family development centres f1fbd458e3c75d8b597c0ac8036f2b88 David Hughes David Hughes true false 2018-09-27 FGMHL Thai family development centres are community organisations, staffed mainly by volunteers, that support families who are encountering problems. This includes supporting families of children subject to language acquisitions problems - the focus of this paper. The paper considers both the main areas of the work and areas where staff said they needed to improve capacity through formal staff development programmes. – Identifying risk, surveillance of at-risk families, building community solidarity, and activities to support families, parenting and children, emerged as key components of FDC work. Staff tread a delicate path between showing community solidarity and carrying out a form of top-down surveillance. They softened their surveillance role by emphasising their social support function and personal links to local communities. Most activities aimed to strengthen family bonding and relationships, with fewer specifically addressing early childhood language deficits. The latter was an areas where volunteer staff were least certain of their capacity to help. Rather than seeing short courses to increase expertise in this area as a solution, most respondents emphasised the advantages of building better teamwork with input from professional specialists. Journal Article Journal of Children's Services 13 3/4 110 121 1746-6660 roles and capacities, surveillance, family development centres, parenting, early childhood language development, Thailand 30 11 2018 2018-11-30 10.1108/JCS-11-2017-0048 Paper written while Warunsicha Supprasert was a visiting doctoral student at Swansea University COLLEGE NANME Medicine, Health and Life Science - Faculty COLLEGE CODE FGMHL Swansea University 2020-10-19T12:55:16.0082886 2018-09-27T16:25:23.8252429 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Public Health Warunsicha Supprasert 1 David Hughes 2 Piyatida Khajornchaikul 3 0044646-04102018123931.pdf 44646.pdf 2018-10-04T12:39:31.7270000 Output 155542 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2018-11-12T00:00:00.0000000 true eng
title Roles and capacities of Thai family development centres
spellingShingle Roles and capacities of Thai family development centres
David Hughes
title_short Roles and capacities of Thai family development centres
title_full Roles and capacities of Thai family development centres
title_fullStr Roles and capacities of Thai family development centres
title_full_unstemmed Roles and capacities of Thai family development centres
title_sort Roles and capacities of Thai family development centres
author_id_str_mv f1fbd458e3c75d8b597c0ac8036f2b88
author_id_fullname_str_mv f1fbd458e3c75d8b597c0ac8036f2b88_***_David Hughes
author David Hughes
author2 Warunsicha Supprasert
David Hughes
Piyatida Khajornchaikul
format Journal article
container_title Journal of Children's Services
container_volume 13
container_issue 3/4
container_start_page 110
publishDate 2018
institution Swansea University
issn 1746-6660
doi_str_mv 10.1108/JCS-11-2017-0048
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Health and Social Care - Public Health{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Public Health
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description Thai family development centres are community organisations, staffed mainly by volunteers, that support families who are encountering problems. This includes supporting families of children subject to language acquisitions problems - the focus of this paper. The paper considers both the main areas of the work and areas where staff said they needed to improve capacity through formal staff development programmes. – Identifying risk, surveillance of at-risk families, building community solidarity, and activities to support families, parenting and children, emerged as key components of FDC work. Staff tread a delicate path between showing community solidarity and carrying out a form of top-down surveillance. They softened their surveillance role by emphasising their social support function and personal links to local communities. Most activities aimed to strengthen family bonding and relationships, with fewer specifically addressing early childhood language deficits. The latter was an areas where volunteer staff were least certain of their capacity to help. Rather than seeing short courses to increase expertise in this area as a solution, most respondents emphasised the advantages of building better teamwork with input from professional specialists.
published_date 2018-11-30T03:55:57Z
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score 11.012678