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NDIS Accommodation Supports To Achieve Your Goal

Setting the proper goals that represent your desires is crucial to receiving the customised NDIS funding that works for you. There is no maximum number of goals you can have in your NDIS plan, but it can be useful to have a mix of short- and long-term objectives. You must include at least one goal in your NDIS plan.




Tips to follow for setting goals


Here are some excellent suggestions for how to approach goal-setting, keeping in mind the significance of choosing the appropriate objectives.


You can set long-term objectives, like leaving your parents house, or short-term objectives to accomplish within the next year, like joining a sports club. Setting a large objective, such as finishing a university degree, does not guarantee that you will receive more money than setting a smaller goal, such as enrolling in a one-day course to earn a certificate; funding must still be fair and required.


Your goals do not have to be supported by the National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA), and you are free to include goals in your plan that will depend on unfunded assistance, like informal help from family members.


No matter whether they are connected to money or not, having all of your goals outlined in your plan will assist to ensure that all of the supports in your life are functioning together.


An ideal NDIS objective is one that:


● You made this decision because it is significant to you and will make you feel good when you accomplish it.

● Ensures that you have enough time to complete everything without feeling pressured

● is centred on the results instead of the supports you'll utilise, for instance, a goal to apply for a job instead of using employment assistance services

● Is not overly specific. For instance, a goal to improve your health is preferable to a goal to specifically go for a walk every day because the health goal will fit more supports.

● Is quantifiable and can be divided into measures for you to take.


You must consider the future and how you see it in order to determine your goals. Your goals can be centred on any aspect of your life, including where you live and who you live with, studying, increasing your independence by learning to drive or getting ready for a job, spending more time in the community, interacting with new people, or strengthening your ties to your family.


Having said that, if keeping your existing way of life is what you want, your goals don't necessarily have to be to change it.


You might think about the following inquiries when you begin to evaluate your future plans and objectives:


● What is now going well for you, and how can this keep happening?

● What aspects of your life are you unhappy with, and how do you think this might change?

● What currently occupies the lion's share of your attention?

● Do you now work or study, and do you require assistance to do so or to alter your existing activities?

● Do you want to start working, going to school, or volunteering?

● Do you think the options you have to get involved in the community are enough, or would you like to do more?

● Do you need to acquire new skills, such as using public transportation, in order to access any community activities?

● Do you have any aspirations you'd like to pursue?


Is there a goal you have been pursuing that you would like further assistance with?


A few months prior to your scheduled plan review, consider whether your current goals have been met or are likely to be met. This will give you time to consider what your potential new goals might be.


Remember that you can remove a goal entirely from your plan if you decide you no longer want it, and you don't have to fulfil it before your next plan review to continue receiving any financing it is tied to.


Get Involved with the NDIS Short-Term Accommodation in Melbourne that can assist you in discussing your goal-setting ideas. A NDIS plan manager, support coordinator, or your neighbourhood area coordinator, for instance, could be involved in the procedure.


Regardless of who you seek assistance from, your goals will be expressed in your own terms when they are included in your plan, and the person who writes them will double-check the goal's phrasing with you to ensure that it is what you want.

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