Developing Fundamental Communication and Emotional Well-being: Intensive Interaction
Submitting Institution
University of SouthamptonUnit of Assessment
EducationSummary Impact Type
SocietalResearch Subject Area(s)
Medical and Health Sciences: Public Health and Health Services
Education: Curriculum and Pedagogy, Specialist Studies In Education
Summary of the impact
Research by Melanie Nind of the University of Southampton and her
collaborator (Hewett) has had a national and international impact on the
practice of professionals who teach people with severe learning
disabilities. The Intensive Interaction approach is included in UK
National Curriculum guidance, the Government's Strategy for people with
learning disabilities, and it is used across education, psychology, social
care and speech and occupational therapies. Nind's research has shaped the
implementation of Intensive Interaction, and provided practitioners in
Eastern Europe, New Zealand, and Australia with new data and concepts that
help to inform practice to enrich the lives of a vulnerable population.
Underpinning research
Communication with people who have severe and complex learning
disabilities or autism can be extremely challenging and many remain
difficult to reach and socially isolated. In response, Melanie Nind
(Professor of Education since 2004) with D. Hewett developed a new
approach of Intensive Interaction which facilitates the learning of
fundamental communication and social abilities by applying principles
elicited from research on caregiver-infant interaction. Nind has been
researching Intensive Interaction for over two decades. The approach and
its underpinning research were introduced to a wide practitioner audience
in the 1994 book, Access to Communication (combining the doctoral
research of both authors) with a second, updated edition in 2005 [3.1].
Nind's local authority-funded research began by showing the efficacy of
Intensive Interaction (Nind, 1996), its effect on behaviour (Nind &
Kellett, 2002) and its role in the curriculum (Nind & Cochrane, 2002)
and in reinstating teachers' confidence in their own knowledge and skills
thus widening its relevance and appeal beyond those looking for a
specialist technique to inclusive educators (Nind & Thomas, 2005) [3.2].
During Nind's time at Southampton, she has conducted research on the
practice and uptake of the approach within psychology, speech and
language therapy services, education, and the National Health Service
Disability Trusts. The research has extended to include the examination of
cultural differences in interactions and the effectiveness of Intensive
Interaction when adopted by novice practitioners. Specifically, the
research tested the hypothesis that staff could learn the principles of
Intensive Interaction sufficiently to have a positive effect on their
relationships with their clients [3.1, 3.3]. More research has
explored the ways that Intensive Interaction promotes social and emotional
well-being, building on Nind's EU-funded work with Weare (also Professor
of Education at Southampton-2008, then emeritus) on interventions
promoting mental health [3.1,3.4]. Further research has extended
into how access is understood and negotiated for people with learning
disabilities. This includes an ESRC-funded seminar series (with Seale,
Senior Lecturer at Southampton until 2011) which involved people with
learning disabilities and their support workers, researchers and
professionals. An important element of that was the development of a
multi-dimensional model of access that Nind has disseminated to Intensive
Interaction practitioners and others [3.5].
Most recently, Nind's work has developed a conceptual framework on
inclusive research processes and on positive risk-taking for people
with learning disabilities, arguing that risk can be positive as
illustrated by Intensive Interaction as a working example [3.6].
This body of work connects with, and builds from, Nind's earlier work on
Intensive Interaction, which has helped to create an extensive collection
of supporters and users of Intensive Interaction who are highly receptive
to applying key messages from research related to it. The award of an ESRC
grant to research `Quality and capacity in inclusive research with people
with learning disabilities' is further indication of the quality and
direction of Nind's underpinning research.
References to the research
Key publications:
3.1 Nind, M. & Hewett, D. (2005) (2nd edn) Access
to Communication: Developing the Basics of Communication with People
with Severe Learning Difficulties through Intensive Interaction,
London, David Fulton.
3.2 Nind, M. & Thomas, G. (2005) Reinstating the value of
teachers' tacit knowledge for the benefit of learners: Using Intensive
Interaction, Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs,
5(3): 97-100.
3.3 Samuel. J., Nind, M., Volans, A. & Scriven, I. (2008) An
evaluation of Intensive Interaction in community living settings for
adults with profound intellectual disabilities, Journal of
Intellectual Disabilities, 12(2), 111-126.
3.4 Nind, M. (2011) Intensive Interaction, emotional development
and emotional well-being, In: Hewett, D. (ed) Theories of Intensive
Interaction. London: Sage
3.5 Nind, M. & Seale, J. (2009) Concepts of access for people
with learning difficulties: Towards a shared understanding, Disability
& Society, 24(3): 273-87.
3.6 Seale, J., Nind, M. & Simmons, B. (2012) Transforming
positive risk-taking practices: the possibilities of creativity and
resilience in learning disability contexts, Scandinavian Journal of
Disability Research, i1-16.
Linked grants:
• Nind (PI): Concepts of access for people with learning disabilities:
towards a shared understanding — ESRC Seminar Series RES-451-25-4145,
2005-2007, £15,000
• Developing the Evidence base for Mental Health Promotion and Prevention
in Europe — EU Framework 6, 2008-2010, €60,000
• Nind (PI): Quality & Capacity in Inclusive Research with People
with Learning Disabilities — ESRC Small Grant RES-000-22-4423, 2011-12,
£78,478
Details of the impact
Research from Southampton has had an impact on practitioners and
professionals in the UK and internationally and thereby contributed
to the health and wellbeing of many thousands of children with learning
difficulties.
Within the UK, Nind's research has had an impact on the
practice of professionals who are responsible for the educational
and social development of more than 38,000 school-aged children in England
with severe/profound and multiple learning difficulties. The 2009 General
Guidelines of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority `Planning, which
oversees the curriculum for pupils with learning difficulties has endorsed
the Intensive Interaction approach [5.1]. The Department for
Education's online materials developed in response to the Salt Review
(2010) include 2 modules on Intensive Interaction and refer readers to the
2009 guidelines [5.1]. Adult services have similarly been
influenced by Nind's Intensive Interaction research. For example, the
Leeds &York NHS Foundation has a psychology service-wide commitment to
Intensive Interaction and their Intensive Interaction newsletter is
circulated to 1250 people across four continents. Nind's Southampton
research is singled out for its relevance and influence in this material
and also in the Foundation's published research summaries for
practitioners. Oxfordshire NHS Learning Disability Psychology Services,
for whom Nind has been a long-term training consultant, have also embedded
Intensive Interaction in their Good Practice Guidelines and online
resources [5.3]. Nind's work has also stimulated debate among
practitioners through newsletter discussions of the impact of
Intensive Interaction on the quality of people's lives [5.2, 5.3].
The UK Government's three-year national strategy document `Valuing
People Now' (Department of Health, 2009), in its outline of its
vision for people with learning disabilities, includes an exposition of
Intensive Interaction, its history and benefits, and cites Nind.
The Intensive Interaction Institute, founded by Nind's collaborator
Hewett, and applying the results of the original research, has 21 regional
networks and an annual conference of approximately 150 practitioners. The
Institute has testified that "thousands of people (and often, their
families) are experiencing better and more fulfilled lives because of
their increased abilities to communicate and relate". Nind has
presented her work through keynote addresses for the annual conference of
the Institute, the most recent one in 2011, where she disseminated her new
work on the importance of Intensive Interaction for emotional development,
new understanding of access, and positive risk-taking and its relevance
for sustainability in Intensive Interaction [5.4, 5.5, 5.6]. Nind
has also promoted her research findings in the voluntary sector, e.g.
giving a keynote in 2010 to the Us in a Bus organisation which uses
Intensive Interaction with people with profound impairment. Nind is
enriching understanding and awareness of Intensive Interaction among
non-specialists by updating the factsheet on Intensive Interaction for the
British Institute of Learning Disabilities (BILD) in 2013, the original
one having had high usage. She has also provided training and workshops
for education providers, speech/occupational therapist groups, and care
providers (e.g. Suffolk Psychology service, Gwent NHS Trust, Oxfordshire
NHS Learning Disability Trust, Pentahact Housing, Ravenswood Community,
numerous special schools). Stories of the ultimate impact of the research
and training are plentiful with beneficiaries broadening to include
individuals who are deaf-blind or have dementia (Platt testimonial).
Internationally, the research on the emotional well-being benefits
of Intensive Interaction has had an impact on practitioners and
professionals in Europe, Australia, and New Zealand. In Eastern European
orphanages, e.g. in Montenegro, positive results have been reported by a
UNICEF-funded project which has used the approach; in Romania, the use of
Intensive Interaction by young volunteers working with neglected children
has shown positive results; and in Greece, Nind and Hewett's core guidance
texts have been translated in Greek and disseminated to practitioners.
Intensive Interaction is being widely implemented in Australia and New
Zealand with the Intensive Interaction led by trainer Mark Barber who uses
Nind's research.
The Southampton research on Intensive Interaction is also having an
impact in Thailand where Nind has advised the lead implementer, Rungrat
Sri-amnuay. Nind has also been approached to advise on international
developments in implementation by parents in France, who after finding
that Intensive Interaction improved the quality of life of their autistic
child sought to `share with the Education authorities, the Autism resource
unit ..., the Academic Inspectorate, and, from there, other parents,
teachers, schools, regional/national education authorities etc' (email
Jones). At grassroots level, practitioners and families have created
Facebook groups/pages which between them have over 1,000 members in four
continents.
In Toronto Nind has supported the use of the Intensive Interaction
approach in psychiatric clinical and educational practice to enable a lead
practitioner to `engage emotionally with individuals manifesting ...
problem behaviours (and support others in doing the same) and this has
been associated with a reduction in the behaviours of concern as well as
being embraced as a positive experience by both individuals and their care
providers' (Bradley testimonial) [5.3, 5.4].
Sources to corroborate the impact
5.1 Dept of Health (2009) Valuing People Now: a new three-year
strategy for people with learning disabilities (p.39)
http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20130107105354/http://www.dh.gov.uk/prod_consum_dh/groups/dh_digitalassets/documents/digitalasset/dh_093375.pdf
(corroborating claim that research is recognised/promoted in national
policy)
5.2 Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (2009) General
Guidance (pp. 20, 45) https://orderline.education.gov.uk/gempdf/144590022X/P_scales_Guidelines.pdf
(corroborating claim that research is recognised/promoted in national
policy)
5.3 Department for Education curriculum materials
http://www.education.gov.uk/schools/pupilsupport/sen/b00209601/send-materials-advanced
See `Modules 2.3 The curriculum challenge and 3.3 Promoting positive
behaviour':
www.complexneeds.org.uk
(corroborating claim that research is recognised/promoted in national
policy)
5.4 Firth, G. & Barber, M. (2010) Using Intensive
Interaction with a Person with a Person with a Social or Communicative
Impairment (Jessica Kinglsey)
(practitioner-oriented book corroborating claim that research is known
and applied by a wide body of practitioners and claim it has made a
material and distinct contribution to the lives of people with learning
disabilities)
5.5 Jones, K. & Howley, M. (2010) An investigation into an
interaction programme for children on the autism spectrum: outcomes for
children, perceptions of schools and a model for training, Journal of
Research in Special Educational Needs, 10(2):115-123.
(practitioner-oriented paper corroborating claim that research is known
and applied by a wide body of practitioners and claim it has made a
material and distinct contribution to the lives of people with learning
disabilities)
5.6 Email correspondence (29 Oct 2012) and testimonial (3 May
2013) by the Psychiatrist-in-Chief, Department of Psychiatry, University
of Toronto, (application of [4] in Toronto)
(corroborating claim of international reach and significance and that
research has made a material and distinct contribution to the lives of
people with learning disabilities)
5.7 Testimonial dated 7 Jun 2013 by the Sensory needs teacher
& Southeast Regional Network Convenor, Intensive Interaction Institute
(impact within Institute regional network; application of [2][3])
(corroborating claim that research is known and applied by a wide body of
practitioners and claim it has made a material and distinct contribution
to the lives of people with learning disabilities)
5.8 Contact service provider: Head of Psychology Services,
Oxfordshire Learning Disability Trust Ridgeway Partnership
(able to corroborate claims that research is known and applied by a wide
body of practitioners, that it has made a material and distinct
contribution to the lives of people with learning disabilities and that
beneficiaries have broadened to include people who are deaf-blind or have
dementia, new settings and novice practitioners)
5.9 Director, Intensive Interaction Institute www.intensiveinteraction.co.uk
(able to corroborate claim that research is known and applied by a wide
body of practitioners and claim it has made a material and distinct
contribution to the lives of people with learning disabilities)
5.10 Intensive Interaction Project Leader: Leeds & York
Partnership NHS Trust www.leedspft.nhs.uk/our_services/ld/intensiveinteraction;
http://www.southernhealth.nhs.uk/knowledge/intensive-interaction/
(able to corroborate claims that research is known and applied by a wide
body of practitioners, that it has made a material and distinct
contribution to the lives of people with learning disabilities and that
beneficiaries have broadened to include people who are deaf-blind or have
dementia, new settings and novice practitioners)