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By popular demand, we're expanding our programmes to support parents of older children—teens and young adults. Join us and feel the energy and support of other parents like you!
Parent Quest helps you build your confidence as a parent by identifying your strengths, so you can guide your son or daughter as they grow more independent. The program includes in-person group sessions, along with one-on-one coaching if needed.
Your time matters—make it count! There’s a lot you can do to help your child live as independently as possible.
Now & Next is a 12-hour interactive program designed to help you create real, positive change for your child and your whole family. Parents and carers have the biggest impact, and this program gives you proven tools and strategies that really work. It was co-designed and trialed by parents like you, so it’s practical, relatable, and effective.
Learn how to get more results with less effort
Use your strengths to create small changes with big impact
Boost your family’s well-being and resilience
Discover strategies that have helped other families
Get practical tools to make the most of your resources—even with limited funding
Families seeking positive support and guidance in formulating a life vision.
Families raising children with ASD/neurodiversity, cognitive/learning disabilities and ADHD.
Families from immigrant background.
Parents and carers with neurodiversity, cognitive or learning differences and ADHD.
The Now & Next Parent Quest guides you through the 4 levels of the Youth Quest programme, so you can coach your son or daughter as they grow and become more independent!
Players move through 4 levels, completing personal and team challenges at each stage:
Personal Challenge: Discover your strengths. Choose your top strengths. Pick two goals for your quest. Think about how your strengths can help you reach these goals.
Team Challenge: Support your team. Listen to each player’s goals and use your strengths to help them take their first step.
Personal Challenge: Turn your goal into action. Fill out a Goal2Action plan by listing the strengths and steps needed to reach your goal.
Team Challenge: Practice coaching. Help your teammates take their next step toward their second goal.
Personal Challenge: Fill in your passport with the destinations (goals or outcomes) that matter most to you.
Team Challenge: Solve the 'Keys' puzzle. Support each other through each Key loop to unlock what a good life means to you.
Personal Challenge: Create your Journey Map using the tools and ideas you've gathered so far.
Team Challenge: Share your Journey Map with a teammate, explain your next goals, and how you plan to reach them.
Learn how to find your voice and make positive choices for your future:
Create a personal vision that motivates you
Turn that vision into clear goals
Build confidence in setting and achieving your goals
Use simple, effective tools developed with past participants like you:
Vision Board – to imagine and plan your ideal future
Wellbeing Dashboard – to boost confidence and track progress
Goal to Action tool – to break goals into small, doable steps
Journey Map – to make sure your goals support a meaningful and active life
Six of the participants had attended the first Now & Next parent programme in 2018, also sponsored by CCS Disability Action. Their testimonies show that the benefits afforded by the programme last over the years, but also that there is always more to learn as one's child grows up and faces new situations and challenges. All participants in this group reported having learnt critical new information from the other parents, be it ideas for future careers for their child or the availability of funding through the disability sector. Seven of the participants had a child or sibling attending our Now & Next Youth programme. See their feedback in the clips below.
Mel is an Occupational Therapist and Mum of a neurodiverse daughter. She talks about her experience of both the Parent and Youth Quest programmes.
Understanding how to unpack a bog goal into small steps - which are achievable is "amazing". Mel feels that the programme helped her build her confidence as a parent by identifying her strengths. She will now plan which of her strengths she can use to address each of her daughter's goals and challenges.
Mel is inspired to use these skills to coach other parents so that they too can experience the feelings of empowerment and success that come with creating real progress for one's child.
Dianne and Martin's insight: Whilst investing all their energy in their son's future, they started to plan for a family holiday....but then realised that what they most needed was time to re-connect as a couple!
Fiona is particularly benefitting from the support of other parents. She is learning from the experience of other parents and looking forward to more opportunities to continue this programme.
Raewyn and husband enjoyed learning to set goals - for the whole family. A crucial insight for them: a Good Life can be formed around setting a microbusiness for their son rather being rejected on the open job market
Steve really enjoyed the goal setting process for himself, his son and his family, and how sharing ideas with other parents uncovered new possibliities for his son's and family's future
Eram and Mohammed found the programme both powerful and fun and were stoked to be part of the Parent Quest launch in Hamilton!!
They particularly enjoyed the sense of achievement throughout the programme module where parents coach each other to achieve their goals' first steps. It teaches parents to choose from their strengths, depending on the goals that they want to achieve - experience both contagious and celebratory!
Jaimie also loved the connection with other like-minded positive parents. She loved the rush of dopamine, motivation and hope from starting to achieve her goals! Maioha enjoyed the goal setting and goal achieving programme methodology, building from her experience at the Youth Quest.
The original version of the Supported Planning process was piloted with over 2000 participants. We built on our award winning programmes (Heyworth, Mahmic and Janson, 2017) to promote active participation, for families, children and youth. As a parent-led group, this was in response to concerns voiced from other parents on how their youth and adult children would give authentic input into what a good life meant to them. We also worked with youth to support their self-determination dreams.
Since then, our group has received 5 innovation awards.
Co-design processes were supervised by two parents Dr Annick Janson and Sylvana Mahmic with lived experience and relevant professional expertise, as a form of targeted, family-focussed planning that they wished had been available when their own family members were growing up.
In 2018, CCS Disability Action awarded us a Social Innovation Funding grant to work on Supported Planning work with Māori participants. This funding enabled us to carry out year-long research to gather valuable input from 13 Māori participants and 10 staff from organisations’ Māori teams, in partnership with a service provider. 23 people participated in the co-design process and discussed what a Supported Planning tool would include to be a culturally appropriate and respectful process. This project was run in collaboration with Colene Herbert, General Manager Midland Region, CCS Disability Action. Special thanks to Colene and her team for facilitating this unique process.
The research included:
Key people interview: families, CCSDA Māori professionals and other key staff
Consultations with Māori participants of our Now and Next programme
Co-design adaptations to reflect the Māori culture
Interviewees co-designed the Supported Planning process to be consistent with three Kaupapa Māori principles: Tino Rangatiratanga – Self-determination, Māori controlling their destiny; Whānau – acknowledging the knowledge embedded in whānaungatanga and the responsibility to act in ways that nurture these relationships and Ata as a guide to the understanding of relationships and wellbeing when engaging with Māori.
As examples, participants liked visuals with sky and stars, which allude to Matariki new beginnings. For some Māori iwi, Matariki relates the story of Tāwhirimātea’s ire, for other iwi, the seven stars are said to be a mother (Matariki) and her six daughters: Tupu-ā-nuku, Tupu-ā-rangi, Waipunarangi, Waitī, Waitā and Ururangi. In this tale, Matariki and her tamariki journey across the sky every year to visit their grandmother Papatūānuku (earth mother), who passes on her knowledge and wisdom so that each different star can make a positive contribution to the environment they live in. In this story mother Matariki guides and supports her children in all that they do. She is ultimately there to watch over her tamariki and ensure they use their grandmother’s teachings to become the best they can be.
Some interviewees mentioned that the stars used to write long term goals reminded them of the star sisters in the Matariki legend and that the boards used during the Supported Planning process reminded them of the many games they used to play during the New Year celebrations. Some noted that Matariki has become integrated in the New Zealand society and this theme was becoming part of the ‘Kiwi language’:
“Matariki is an amazing metaphor for [this tool] because it symbolizes a new beginning and mostly because it goes across all Māori different tribes”.
We feel the goal setting starting with family goals and not the child or personal goals is in line with Māori culture.
In the past, it was the professionals, not the whānau or Iwi who directed our IEP conversations. Now we want to regain control over these conversations, “be the CEO of our child’s success” and better collaborate with professionals.
Please see more details on how this co-design process was embedded in this Supported Planning tool, including our final report to CCSDA on this page.
Please also review the 2020 video testimonial of Rangi Hepi from the rural Manawatu explaining how the process empowered him to fill his kete.
Our aim is to train future Māori and youth facilitators so that supported planning can be offered as one of the tools in their kete.
A number of sessions were carried out where people contributed photos that are meaningful to them and discussed their role in the planning process
Our co-design participants brought out aspects of their experience which was important to them and their communities. Some contributed personal photos of their university graduation, their mokos, their marae or informal pictures of their families collecting kai moana.
Participants were invited to trial the different versions of the planning tool, with open, informal chatting around Kai to capture all aspects, big and small around planning
The co-design process takes time, but it is rewarding to create some new outcomes and bring the project to a conclusion together.
With funding from the Innovation Stream (CCSDA, Wellington), we carried out a 6 months project to gather valuable input from Maori participants and organisations. People engaged in this cooperation and the final version was co-created. Some excerpts of this activity is described above, and an interim informal report is presented on the left.
"The programme has helped me identify what is already working and what I want to change going forward. This learning journey and the commonality of our experiences as parents helped me feel connected with participants. This workshop helped me look into the future to understand what kind of parent I want to be. This was a unique positive experience - listening to other parents discuss their challenges and solutions helped me fill my kete"
Recommendations from the Social Innovation Report
To add to the New Zealand Pictability a set of goal cards with the Maori themes suggested by participants.
To continue working in partnership with Maori families and embed in future projects ongoing consultation about what matters to Maori families in the process of planning for their child and family.
Most professionals also mentioned that this suite of tools should be rolled out across New Zealand as the goal setting we have to comply to government directives is “old and stale”. Evidence from this project is congruent with CCS Disability Action vision items (1) People can make conscious choices about education, training, home, work, real relationships, natural supports and (2) Growing more self-advocacy, confidence, knowledge and resources to bring the voices of people with disabilities to the fore.
We interviewed 25 emerging leaders to collate their thoughts about community Inclusion. Their interviews were organised into a free online course for youth workers: "Peer Learning to develop leadership and build community capacity". This Virtual Role Model course (https://www.udemy.com/course/virtualrolemodels) explains to families and young people what impact they can have to connect disabled people to community and mainstream. The course is showcased by UNESCO. These e-learning programs were aimed at multicultural audiences and have reached a wide range of learners. Early successes brought new demand, with some programs reaching a combined attendance of over 10,000 online learners. Some were accessible via the Ted.com platform. Introduction clip.
We interviewed 12 migrants to New Zealand with lived experience of disability. The Migrants and Refugees with disability storytelling project was Showcased in the 2013 New Zealand Race Relations Report submitted to the United Nations by the Human Rights Commission and was funded by the New Zealand IHC Foundation. http://fasttrackinclusiontrust.blogspot.com/p/disabled-refugees-stories.html