Trainer’s Resource Materials Module 7 Level 3
National ID&R Curriculum, Funded by the U.S. Department of Education, V 2.0 1
Trainer’s Resource Materials Module 7 Level 3
How to Use the Trainer’s Resource MaterialsName of Activity
Slide #
Title of Resource Page(s)
Page #
Prep Directions for
Resource pages
MEP Eligibility Factor Review
7 Eligibility Factor Requirements Answer KEY
3 KEY is for trainer only.
The Interview Process: Before the Interview
11 The Interview Process Graphic Organizer Answer KEY
4 KEY is for trainer only.
The Interview Process: During the Interview
18 Explaining the MEP and the Purpose of the Interview Cards
5 Duplicate on cardstock and cut apart. Each participant role-playing the recruiter
Level 3 Assessment
45 Level 3 Assessment and KEY
6-7 One copy per participant; KEY is for
National ID&R Curriculum, Funded by the U.S. Department of Education, V 2.0 2
Trainer’s Resource Materials Module 7 Level 3
Eligibility Factor Requirements Answer KEY From the list below, determine the risk of the potential emergency: none, low, moderate or high.
MOVE The child moved from one school district to another.
MOVE The move was due to economic necessity.
PURPOSE OF THE MOVE The worker moved to obtain qualifying work and obtained it.
PURPOSE OF THE MOVE One purpose of the worker’s move was to seek or obtain qualifying work.
QUALIFYING WORK The work is agricultural or fishing.
AGE The child is younger than age 22.
MOVE The move was a change from one residence to another residence.
QUALIFYING WORK The employment is seasonal or temporary.
PURPOSE OF THE MOVE The worker moved for qualifying work specifically, but did not obtain the work.
SCHOOL COMPLETION The child is eligible for a free public education under state law.
MOVE The move occurred within the past 36 months.
PURPOSE OF THE MOVE The worker moved to obtain qualifying work and obtained qualifying work soon after the move.
MOVEThe child moved on his or her own as a migratory agricultural worker/migratory fisher OR the child moved with or to join/precede a parent, spouse or guardian who is a migratory agricultural worker/migratory fisher.
National ID&R Curriculum, Funded by the U.S. Department of Education, V 2.0 3
Trainer’s Resource Materials Module 7 Level 3
The Interview Process Graphic Organizer KEY
National ID&R Curriculum, Funded by the U.S. Department of Education, V 2.0 4
The Interview Process
Before the interview
During the interview
After the interview
Pre-screen the family prior to the visit or have the school or employer survey the family, if possible.
Utilize your state’s migrant student database and MSIX to gain available information in advance,
Utilize referral services prior to the visit so that you bring useful resources.
Make arrangements for a translator to accompany you (if necessary) and let the family know two people will conduct the interview.
Dress neatly, but not too formally, so that the family is comfortable.
Let all appropriate parties (schools, employers, housing unit manager) know your reason for contacting families.
Review the basic child eligibility factors to be discussed at the interview.
Bring your personal digital assistant, laptop, COE forms and writing
Observe the surroundings Take notes on a secondary
notepad before filling in the COE form.
Use a conversational tone. Practice active listening. Repeat or re-word
questions. Answer questions and take
notes for follow up. Ask for additional
information if the facts are unclear, unclear whether work sought is qualifying work, high risk area or has been visited in the past, suspect the family has not been truthful.
Thank the interviewee and ask for referrals.
Introduce yourself and explain the purpose of the visit.
Find common ground with the family or youth that you are interviewing.
Contact agencies (with family’s prior permission) with referral information needed to address other needs outside the scope of the MEP.
Consult with the translator (if applicable) to verify all information was recorded correctly.
Record the interview in a recruiter’s log (if required by state and local programs)
Thank all parties involved for their cooperation/assistance.
Update the state migrant student database.
Trainer’s Resource Materials Module 7 Level 3
Explaining the MEP and the Purpose of the Interview Cards
Use the following terms to explain the MEP and the purpose of the interview: Migrant Education Program eligibility qualify confidential seasonal temporary agriculture gather information education children requirements interview fishing
Use the following terms to explain the MEP and the purpose of the interview: Migrant Education Program eligibility qualify confidential seasonal temporary agriculture gather information education children requirements interview fishing
Use the following terms to explain the MEP and the purpose of the interview: Migrant Education Program eligibility qualify confidential seasonal temporary agriculture gather information education children requirements interview fishing
Use the following terms to explain the MEP and the purpose of the interview: Migrant Education Program eligibility qualify confidential seasonal temporary agriculture gather information education children requirements interview fishing
National ID&R Curriculum, Funded by the U.S. Department of Education, V 2.0 5
Trainer’s Resource Materials Module 7 Level 3
Level 3 Assessment1. What is the purpose of a recruiter interviewing a migrant family or youth for the MEP?
A. To give migrant families an opportunity to determine whether their children are eligible for the MEP.
B. For the recruiter to get to know a migrant family.C. For the recruiter to determine whether the family is needy and lives below the
poverty level.D. For the recruiter to obtain the information needed from the migrant family to make
an informed MEP eligibility decision while building rapport with the family or youth.
2. Change each leading question below into an appropriate open-ended question.
A. Leading question: You moved here to work in the orchards, right?Open-ended question:
B. Leading question: You haven’t been here long, have you?Open-ended question:
C. Leading question: You’ve moved around a lot during the last three years, haven’t you?Open-ended question
3. For each of the following activities, identify whether they need to be done before the interview, during the interview or after the interview. Write before, during or after in the blank.
A. Have the COE signed by the family member or youth. _________________B. Record information in a recruiter’s log (if required). ____________________C. Gather information from the state migrant student database. ____________D. Tell colleagues the time and location of your interview and when you plan to
return. _____________E. Be an active listener. ____________________F. Ask additional questions if answers are unclear. __________________________
National ID&R Curriculum, Funded by the U.S. Department of Education, V 2.0 6
Trainer’s Resource Materials Module 7 Level 3
National ID&R Curriculum, Funded by the U.S. Department of Education, V 2.0 7
Trainer’s Resource Materials Module 7 Level 3
Level 3 Assessment KEY1. What is the purpose of a recruiter interviewing a migrant family or youth for the MEP?
A. To give migrant families an opportunity to determine whether their children are eligible for the MEP.
B. For the recruiter to get to know a migrant family.C. For the recruiter to determine whether the family is needy and lives below the
poverty level.
D. For the recruiter to obtain the information needed from the migrant family to make an informed MEP eligibility decision while building rapport with the family or youth.
2. Change each leading question below into an appropriate open-ended question.
Answers may vary.A. Leading question: You moved here to work in the orchards, right?
Open-ended question: Why did you move here?
B. .Leading question: You haven’t been here long, have you?Open-ended question:
C. Leading question: You’ve moved around a lot during the last three years, haven’t you?Open-ended question: Where have you lived during the past three years?
3. For each of the following activities, identify whether they need to be done before the interview, during the interview or after the interview. Write before, during or after in the blank.
A. Have the COE signed by the family member or youth. During the interviewB. Record information in a recruiter’s log (if required). After the interviewC. Gather information from the state migrant student database. Before the interviewD. Tell colleagues the time and location of your interview and when you plan to
return. Before the interviewE. Be an active listener. During the interview.F. Ask additional questions if answers are unclear. During the interview.
National ID&R Curriculum, Funded by the U.S. Department of Education, V 2.0 8