Strong, trusted relationships are the basis of good support and ongoing, open communication is the key to effective working relationships. A clear, shared understanding about expectations and responsibilities is an essential first step in establishing a working relationship with an NDIS participant. It is equally important to check in, invite feedback, and adjust to reflect changed needs or priorities along the way.
Your role is to create an environment where both the NDIS participant and the worker feel at ease and able to ask for clarification or help, make a suggestion or raise a difficult issue when they need to. At the outset, this includes confirming how the participant prefers to communicate so they can effectively engage and contribute, especially where participants are non-verbal.
When to have conversations
- You are arranging to support a new participant: You meet with the participant, to get to know them, confirm the supports to be delivered, and understand their needs and preferences. You note the key points so that you can make sure workers in their support team have the relevant capabilities and know what is expected. You also explain your role as supervisor and your responsibility to ensure support is delivered to expected standards. You explain that you will be checking in on how things are going from time to time and encourage the participant to provide feedback directly to the worker or to yourself, including praise for good work and any areas for improvement.
- A worker is joining the participant’s support team: You make sure the worker understands the supports to be delivered and the participant’s needs and preferences. You provide them with the information the participant gave you and check if there is anything they are not sure about before they start. You follow up by introducing the new worker to the participant and make sure there is a clear, common understanding of what supports will be delivered and how.
- A worker you supervise is requesting your help to support a participant: You make time to talk with them so you can identify where and how they need help. As part of the conversation, you discuss any related capability development needs and how to address them and update the Capability Development Plan section in the Worker’s Performance Agreement as needed.
- There is an incident or a near miss: You talk through what happened and the possible causes with the worker and the participant and agree on how to ensure it does not happen again. You record the outcome so that the participant and all their support workers are aware of the new arrangements. You consider whether there are any related capability development needs for the individual worker or across the organisation. If so, you update the relevant Worker Capability Development Plan section in the Worker’s Performance Agreement.
- Regular check-ins to discuss how things are going: As part of your regular review, you, the worker and the participant refer back to your earlier agreement on expectations, discuss how things are going, take note of any feedback from the participant or the worker and make any necessary adjustments to how supports are delivered as circumstances or needs change.
Preparing for conversations
You find out about the participant’s communication needs and preferences and check if they would like to involve anyone else when discussing their support with you or the worker, such as a family member. You plan what to discuss, questions to ask and how best to raise issues. This will greatly improve the quality and usefulness of two-way and three-way conversations between the participant, the worker and the supervisor. As the supervisor, you encourage participants and workers to access their version of this resource to help them think about the information they would like to share or receive, the points they would like to check, etc.
Adjusting the Conversation Guide for your situation: You check that the questions in the Conversation Guide are relevant for the circumstances. By selecting the main headings in the Conversation Guide, you can link to the relevant core capabilities in the Framework to check whether you want to ask questions about other aspects of the capabilities to suit the needs of the participant.
Depending on the support needs of the individual participant, you may want to consider the additional identity capabilities, relevant when supporting participants who are Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander, culturally and linguistically diverse or LGBTIQA+. There are also additional specialised capabilities you can select to suit a participant’s specific support needs. If participants require support for high intensity daily personal activities, you will find these capabilities described in the High Intensity Support Skills Descriptors.
Recording outcomes
Recording key points from conversations provides an important reference for future conversations. How and where you record the points depends on what you will use them for, and you should discuss the proposed method with the worker and participant involved. For example, some organisations use customer relationship management (CRM) systems to record and track how they are meeting participants needs and preferences so the key points can be added and accessed there.
In other organisations, supervisors and workers keep written records and include key points in handover notes to ensure all relevant information is available to workers assigned to participants. Any points related to the worker’s performance (strengths or capability development needs, agreed learning objectives) should be recorded in the Worker’s Performance Agreement, including the Capability Development Plan section. Information also needs to be accessible to participants. For example, a participant might want to keep a summary of main points they want their workers to know about in a note on their fridge. Whatever arrangements are used, make sure you consider and respect issues of privacy when sharing information of a personal or confidential nature.
Giving and receiving feedback
Good working relationships rely on being able to give and receive open, honest feedback. When workers and participants can talk about what is going well and what needs to change, minor concerns can be addressed before they become major problems.
Feedback is about much more than formal channels for complaints and feedback management systems. By letting workers know what they are doing well and supporting them where they need help, you build strong working relationships and connections between you and the worker and between the worker and the organisation. When workers feel valued and supported they will be more capable and confident to deliver quality support. Organisations are also expected to provide appropriate supervision, including feedback and development, as outlined in the guidance to providers to meet requirements of the NDIS Code of Conduct. This not only gives you and your organisation confidence about the quality of support delivered, it also supports a more engaged and satisfied workforce.
Supervisors can encourage the habit of providing positive, developmental feedback as part of day-to-day interactions by modelling good practice in the way they invite, respond to and provide feedback, and by supporting workers and participants to participate.
For more information on the when, what and how of effective feedback, see the Feedback Tip Sheet for Supervisors. You can also refer workers and participants to tailored versions of this guide.