Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Culturally Tailoring Parent Mediated Interventions Webinar

The UNC Franklin Graham Child Development Institute logo

FPG Distinguished Speaker Series

Culturally Tailoring Parent Mediated Interventions:

An Iterative Process

Description: UNC's Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute is pleased to welcome Sandy Magaña, PhD, MSW, as the second speaker in our 2021-2022 distinguished speaker series, Examining Equity and Diversity in the Field of Developmental Disabilities.

In this talk, Professor Magaña will discuss the need for culturally tailored parent mediated interventions for parents of children with ASD and the process of cultural adaptation. She will use examples from her own research in which a parent educational intervention was developed for Latino families of children with ASD and later adapted for African American, Chinese American, and low-resource communities.

Learning Objectives

  • Attendees will be able to explain the importance of cultural adaptation.
  • Attendees will be able to identify at least 3 key components important for cultural adaptation.
  • Attendees will be able to apply at least one strategy for working with diverse populations in their own practice.

Time: Nov 17, 2021 03:30 PM in Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Register Here! 

Speaker

Sandy Magaña photo

Sandy Magaña, PhD, MSW @Autism and Neurodevelopmental Disabilities 

in the Steve Hicks School of Social Work

Master of Social Work from California State University, San Bernardino and a PhD from the Heller Graduate School of Social Policy at Brandeis University. She completed her post-doctoral training from the NICHD funded Post-Doctoral Program in Developmental Disabilities Research at the Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison. She was a faculty member in the UW-Madison School of Social Work for 12 years and later served as a Professor at the Department of Disability and Human Development at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Her current research includes investigating racial and ethnic disparities among children with autism and developmental disabilities and developing culturally relevant interventions to address these disparities.

No comments: