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How To Build a Father Friendly Child Welfare System

How To Build a Father Friendly Child Welfare System. National Association of Counsel for Children National Conference August 2012 Chicago, IL.

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How To Build a Father Friendly Child Welfare System

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  1. How To Build a Father Friendly Child Welfare System National Association of Counsel for Children National Conference August 2012 Chicago, IL

  2. Sonia C. VelazquezExecutive Director ECLT Foundation, Geneva, Switzerland NACC Board MemberFormer Project Director, National Quality Improvement Center on Non Resident Fathers and the Child Welfare System2006-2011

  3. Framing Question: How to effectively facilitate the involvement of fathers in the children’s lives when Child Welfare has intervened?

  4. Knowledge Development Context for Non-Resident Fathers and the Child Welfare System: The Framework • 1. How do Child Welfare Systems Identify, locate, contact and engage fathers? • 2. How do fathers work with Child Welfare and Interconnected Systems and the Courts to be involved in their children’s lives?

  5. Knowledge Development Efforts to Assist States, Tribes, the Legal Community, the Courts, and Community-Based Programs to Enhance Non- Resident Father Engagement with Child Welfare • What About the Dads: Child Welfare Agencies’ Efforts to Identify, Locate, and Involve NonResident Fathers. (Malm, Murray, Geen) US DHHS • More about the Dads: Exploring Associations between Nonresident Father Involvement and Child Welfare Case Outcomes (ASPE) US DHHS

  6. Quality Improvement Center on Non-Resident Fathers in Child Welfare: • Began in 2006 with a Children’s Bureau award • Knowledge development • Product development • Field test of engagement in four sites • Program development recommendations

  7. National Quality Improvement Center on Non-Resident Fathers and the Child Welfare System, US DHHS, ACF, ACYF – American Humane Association, American Bar Association, National Fatherhood Initiative • Four QIC NRF Research Sites: • Indiana Fathers and Families Center and Indiana Department of Child Services (Marion County) • The Division of Children and Family Services (Washington State Department of Social and Health Services, King County) and Divine Alternatives for Dads • El Paso County (Colorado Springs, CO.) and the Center on Fathering • Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (Tarrant County; Ft. Worth) and the Fatherhood New Day Services • National Advisory Board • National and Local Fathers’ Councils

  8. Resource Web Sites: • www.fatherhoodQIC.org • www.engagingfathers.org

  9. What’s In It For… • Child Welfare: • Broadens circle of family support by including fathers and potentially their family/friends • More “eyes” to survey the well-being of the child • Increased informal supports and resources • Positive well-being outcomes for child • Promotes family and cultural connection

  10. What’s In It For… • Child Welfare: • Helps meet the expectations of the CFSR (permanency, safety, well-being and family involvement) • Facilitates concurrent planning — more than one goal • Supports required reasonable or diligent efforts • Engages paternal relatives as possible permanency options

  11. What’s In It For… • Mothers & Families: • Overall positive outcomes for children’s well-being • Additional support from father & paternal family • Commitment to family modeled for children • Increase in mother’s patience, flexibility and emotional responsiveness toward child • Successful co-parenting sends consistent messages to child about right and wrong

  12. What’s In It For… • Children: • Fathers provide unique support • Emotional • Financial • Physical • Involvement of paternal kin • Expanded cultural & family ties • Knowledge of family medical history

  13. What’s In It For… • Children: • Significantly more likely to exhibit healthy self-esteem & pro-social behavior • Better educational outcomes • More friendships & fewer behavioral concerns • Both parents act as partners in raising them • Increased family support that can ensure safety, emotional well-being & connection to caring adults • Evans, G. D., & Fogarty, K. (2008). The hidden benefits of being an involved father. Retrieved May 21, 2009, from http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/HE137 • Ferguson, G. (2009). Questions about kids: Do dads really make a difference? Center for Early Education and Development (CEED), College of Education and Human Development, University of Minnesota. Retrieved May 21, 2009, from http://cehd.umn.edu/ceed/publications/questionsaboutkids/dadenglish.pdf

  14. Fatherhood Toolkit: Leadership and Organizational Philosophy Program Management Policies and Procedures Organizational and Community Assessment Parent and Family Involvement Practices Program Physical Environment Staff Training and Professional Development Collaboration and Organizational Networking Community Outreach Information and Data Support Systems All Fathers are Important

  15. Leadership and Organizational Philosophy: • NRF-QIC Products • Problem statement • Non Resident Fathers are not seen as a resource for their children in Child Welfare • Non Resident Fathers are not present in virtually all child welfare cases • Gender matters in parenting and service delivery • Father Friendly Check Up • Partnership with Courts as decision makers

  16. Organizational and Community Assessment: • Father Advisory Committee • Videos – fathers’ stories www.youtube.com/watch?v=4fcYfYAlREk • Newsletters—fathers’ stories • Collaboration with other organizations – systems integration – particularly Child Support Enforcement • Transportation, Job training, substance abuse and mental health services

  17. Program Management Policies and Procedures: • “Parent” equals code word for mother • “Visitation”* might not be the same as “Parenting Time”** • *Philosophy regarding frequency, location, etc. • ** What does a Dad or Mom do when face to face with children • Incarcerated fathers and visitation policy • Child welfare services and prison policy • Do policies present conflicting motivations for fathers and so create barriers? • Father recruitment data from the four QIC-NRF field sites • Child Outcomes on CFSRs

  18. Parent and Family Involvement Practices: • Courts - Child and Family Attorneys • Father’s legal guidebook • FGDM or other family engagement practices • www.fgdm.org • QIC NRF facilitated peer fatherhood curriculum • www.fatherhoodQIC.org • Bringing Back the Dads curriculum and male helping seeking behaviors • Service availability

  19. Parent and Family Involvement Practices: • Bringing Back the Dads modules: • Dad as Part of the Solution: Overview of the child welfare system • Dad as Planner: Service planning in the child welfare system • Dad as Provider: Supporting your children • Dad as Team Player: Shared parenting • Dad as Parent: Understanding your children • Dad as Community Member: Identifying and accessing resources • Dad as Part of the Juvenile Court Process: Legal advocacy and court etiquette • Dad as Part of Children’s Placement: Visiting with your children • Dad as Healthy Parent: Taking care of you • Dad as Cultural Guide: The role of culture in parenting • Dad as Worker: Workforce readiness

  20. Program Physical Environment: • Pictures • Magazines • Color schemes • Chairs instead of couches • Diaper changing stations in men’s restrooms

  21. Staff Training and Professional Development: • Family finding training – www.senecacenter.org • Social worker training – www.fatherhoodQIC.org • Social worker coaching/mentoring training • Attorney training • Bench cards • ABA green book - Advocating for Nonresident Fathers in Child Welfare Court Cases

  22. All Fathers are Important: • Fathers are at different stages of emotional availability • Respect for relationship father has with children • As many different relationship types as there are fathers • Different views of what family should be • How to help fathers clarify values? • How to help fathers develop a plan? • What are aspirations of child and of father? • What is practical? • What is the safety assessment philosophy?

  23. Understanding the Socialization of Men: • Socially constructed ideas cultivate: • Emotional conflict • Behavioral problems • Emotional pain, often resulting in an emotional trauma causing men to present as: • Stoic • Firm • Detached emotionally Men have traditionally found it difficult to acknowledge their feelings and the effect they have on their lives and the lives of family members. • Link retrieved by American Humane June 16, 2009

  24. Societal Factors That Influence the Development of Manhood & Fatherhood: • Discouraging the expression of emotions • — “real men don’t cry” • Anger is an acceptable male emotion • Dominant, disconnected and dangerous • Being physically strong • Ambition and competition • Good occupational functioning • Athletic ability • Economic success • Sexual conquests • The section was adapted from Shears, J., & Furman, R., Working with fathers: A review of the literature. University of North Carolina- Charlotte; and Hofferth, S. L. (2001, February). Race/ethnic differences in father involvement in two-parent families: Culture, context, or economy. Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan. Retrieved May 21, 2009, from http://ceel.psc.isr.umich.edu/pubs/papers/ceel019-01.pdf

  25. Strategies to Encourage Help-Seeking Behaviors: • Normalize their experience • Minimize reflection on affect & emotions • Provide direct feedback and action-oriented steps • Use metaphors to make problems concrete and relatable • Use approaches that focus on logic and behavior

  26. Developing the Relationship: • A desire to develop a positive and authentic relationship with your client requires that you remain sensitive to the CULTURAL and GENDER differences. • Take the time to get to know them and how their experiences have shaped who they are today. • Remain attentive to your verbal and non-verbal responses and how they may be interpreted from their cultural lens. • Check things out and ask questions.

  27. Approaches to Engaging Non-Resident Fathers: • Assume the non-resident father wants to be involved • Restore the non-resident father in the child's life • Individualize each case • Suspend judgments • Make room for expressions of anger

  28. Approaches to Engaging Non-Resident Fathers: • Seek first to understand • Recognize and acknowledge previous experience with child welfare • Transparency regarding agency’s involvement and the non-resident father’s role in the case process • Acknowledge the power in your position along with empowering the non-resident father

  29. Approaches to Engaging Non-Resident Fathers: • Identify the non-resident father’s strengths • Increase his understanding of how important he is to his child • Encourage opportunities for change, particularly if he is the person that caused the harm

  30. Where are the Non-Resident Fathers ? • Differences between communities based upon geography, transportation, economics and demographics • - Results from four cities, handout - • Local assessment from existing families • Practicality of strategies • Family Finding • Costs of not reaching fathers – well-being and monetary

  31. Research Findings from QIC NRF: • Of the homes from which children are removed, 75% are homes in which the fathers did not reside. • Eighty per cent of children of program fathers are in foster homes, half of these with relatives. • Twenty five per cent of program fathers had had their first child as teenagers. • Fifty seven per cent of program fathers reported receiving fewer than 12 years of education

  32. Research Findings from QIC NRF: • Twenty per cent of program fathers are employed full time; an additional 15% are employed part-time or self-employed. • More than half of program non-resident fathers report they have been fairly treated. • Children of program non-resident have more than one third fewer placement moves than other children [ but they are much younger than the general foster care child population].

  33. Father-Friendly Check-Up: • Tool to help agencies create an environment that involves non-resident fathers and foster the healthy development of children • Seven Assessment Areas • Leadership & Organization Philosophy • Program Management Policies & Procedures • Parent Involvement Program • Program Physical Environment • Staff Training & Professional Development • Collaboration & Organizational Networking • Community Outreach

  34. Where is the 97.9%? Not Relevant Ineligible Not locatable ______ Declined Enrolled Fathers with children entering care during the project Minus serious domestic violence Minus outside jurisdiction Excluding resident fathers, fathers with rights terminated and deceased Minus other disqualified Minus no name for father Minus incarcerated Minus NRF with child abuse history Minus contact, no response Minus declined Minus could not locate Attended

  35. Engaging Fathers in Child Welfare Proceedings

  36. Resourcesfrom the QIC-NRF: • All products at: www.fatherhoodqic.org • Father-Friendly Check Up for Child Protection Courts (forthcoming) • Lay CASA/GAL, Child’s Lawyer, and Agency Attorney Practice Briefs • Finding Your Way: Guides for Fathers in Child Protection Cases • Set of Three Judicial Bench Cards • Book and Curricula for Attorneys Representing NRFs (including a chapter for judges)

  37. Includes Instructor’s Guides, Power Point Slides, Handouts, and Post-Training Tests • Entire content available on CD-ROM • Checklists for fathers’ lawyers are also available at: • www.fatherhoodqic. org/checklists.shtml

  38. Other Questions?

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