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Explore incorporating CFSR principles into MSW child welfare curriculum, with a focus on emerging issues, strategies, and federal goals for positive outcomes. Enhance skills for advancing child and family well-being.
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1. Integrating CFSR Principles into the MSW Child Welfare Curriculum Matthew Mattila, ACSW, CISW
Collaborative MSW Program
University of Wisconsin – Green Bay
University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh
2. Today’s presentation Course overview
CFSR Principles
Integration
Sample exercise (Back to school!)
Discussion
Share MSW curriculum ideas
3. UW Green Bay / UW OshkoshCollaborative MSW Program Established in 2004 by two regional state universities that had established BSW programs
Began as full-time, part-time program established in 2008 - currently serves 90 MSW students
One of 3 Wisconsin MSW programs with Title IV-E child welfare training programs
20 IV-E students receive stipends equivalent to full or part-time tuition
4. SOC WORK 735: Emerging Issues in Child Welfare One of two required courses for MSW IV-E stipend students, taken in advanced year.
Course originally designed to examine current topics / trends in child welfare – examples:
Disproportional representation of children of color in child welfare system
Domestic violence and child welfare
Family engagement
Child welfare workforce issues
5. SOC WORK 735: Emerging Issues in Child Welfare Course redesigned in 2010 to focus upon contemporary practices / strategies that achieve positive outcomes for vulnerable children and families
Conceptual framework of course based upon:
Federal child welfare goals: safety, permanency and well-being
Child & Family Services Review concepts and principles
6. SOC WORK 735: Emerging Issues in Child Welfare Course design rationale:
Up to half of MSW students enrolled are current public child welfare agency employees
Preparation of MSW-level social workers for advanced-practice roles / career development
Encourage student focus upon evaluation, quality assurance, practice improvement
Emphasize systemic focus
7. Learning Objectives Promote policies and practices that protect children and youth from abuse and neglect
Promote policies and practices that achieve permanency for children and youth
Promote policies and practices that promote the well-being of children, youth and families
8. Learning Objectives Evaluate emerging issues and trends in the field of child welfare
Analyze how federal and state child welfare policies impact service delivery
Compare the federal and state roles in evaluating child welfare systems
Apply principles of trauma-informed care to child welfare practice
9. Course texts / resources Course text:
Child Welfare for the 20th Century: A handbook of practices, policies and programs.
Student choice of one of the following:
Signs of Safety: A solution and safety-oriented approach to child protection casework
Reforming Child Welfare
Child Welfare Supervision: A practical guide for child welfare supervisors and managers
10. SOC WORK 735: Emerging Issues in Child Welfare Instructor experience as federal CFSR consultant / reviewer (2009-10):
Michigan
Rhode Island
Utah
New Hampshire
11. CFSR Practice Principles Through the (CFSR) reviews, the Children’s Bureau promotes States’ use of practice principles believed to support positive outcomes for children and families. These are:
family-centered practice
community-based services
individualizing services that address the unique needs of children and families, and
strengthening parents’ capacity to protect and provide for their children.
Children’s Bureau. 2006. CFSR Procedures Manual
12. CFSR emphasis on collaboration The safety, permanency, and well-being of children is a shared responsibility, and child welfare agencies should make every effort to reach out to other partners who can help to achieve positive results with respect to the CFSR child welfare outcomes and systemic factors.
Child welfare agencies do not serve children and families in isolation. They
should work in partnership with policymakers, community leaders, and other
public and private agencies to improve outcomes for children and families in their
States. This includes partnering with organizations that directly serve children,
youth, and families, and those whose actions impact family and community life.
Family-centered and community-based practices are integral to improving
outcomes for children and families. As such, collaboration with families,
including young people, is important in identifying and assessing strengths and
barriers to improved outcomes for children, youth, and families.
Children’s Bureau. 2006. CFSR Procedures Manual
13. CFSR DomainsOutcomes Safety
Children are, first and foremost, protected from abuse and neglect.
Children are safely maintained in their homes whenever possible and appropriate
Children’s Bureau. 2006. CFSR Procedures Manual
14. CFSR DomainsOutcomes Permanency
Children have permanency and stability in their living situations.
The continuity of family relationships and connections is preserved for children.
Children’s Bureau. 2006. CFSR Procedures Manual
15. CFSR DomainsOutcomes Child & Family Well-Being
Families have enhanced capacity to provide for their children’s needs.
Children receive appropriate services to meet their educational needs.
Children receive adequate services to meet their physical and mental health needs.
16. Practices emphasized in CFSR reviews Formal and informal safety assessments (including while child is in foster care)
Timeliness, appropriateness and achievement of permanency goal
Preserving foster child’s connection with parents, siblings, extended family and community
Proximity (for visits)
Siblings (visitation, if not placed together)
Relatives (“concerted efforts to place with relatives”)
Community (neighborhood, faith, tribe, school, friends)
17. Practices emphasized in CFSR reviews Needs assessment of child, parents and foster parents
Service provision to child, parents and foster parents
Identification of and outreach to absent parent
Child and family involvement in case planning
Quality of social worker visits
18. Incorporating CFSR principles into child welfare course Framework
Safety / Permanency / Well-Being
Content / Learning Activities
Examine practices and strategies that achieve positive outcomes in each of these 3 areas
Examine role and purpose of CQI and CFSR in child welfare service delivery
Assignments
Designed to provide flexibility for student inquiry within the overall context of the course
19. Integration of CFSR Themes Family-centered practice
Community-based
Individualized services
Enhancement of parental capacity
Collaboration to achieve positive outcomes
Child welfare is community responsibility
Partnership with community organizations
Partnership with families and young people
20. Unit 1: Child safety Safety Outcome #1: Children and youth are, first and foremost, to be protected from abuse and neglect
Learning goal: Promote effective policies and practices (that achieve outcome)
Achieved by:
Readings on safety and risk assessment
Case analysis
Class exercise
Written assignment
21. Unit 1: Child Safety Safety Outcome #2: Children and youth are safely maintained in their own homes whenever possible and appropriate.
Learning goal: Promote effective policies and practices (that achieve outcome)
Achieved by:
Readings on family preservation
Case analysis
Class exercise
Written assignment
22. Unit 2: Permanency Permanency Outcome 1: Children have permanency and stability in their living situations.
Learning goal: Promote effective policies and practices (that achieve outcome)
Achieved by:
Readings on concurrent planning
Case analysis
Class exercise
Written assignment
23. Unit 2: Permanency Permanency Outcome 2: The continuity of family relationships and connections is preserved.
Learning goal: Promote effective policies and practices (that achieve outcome)
Achieved by:
Readings on family reunification, engaging fathers & permanency for special populations
Case analysis
Class exercise
Written assignment
24. Unit 3: Family & Child Well-being Well-being Outcome 1: Families have enhanced capacity to provide for their children’s needs.
Learning goal: Promote effective policies and practices (that achieve outcome)
Achieved by:
Readings on risk and resilience principles, assessment for sound decision-making and engaging families in planning / service delivery
Case analysis
Class exercise
Written assignment
25. Unit 3: Family & Child Well-being Well-being Outcome 2: Children and youth receive appropriate services to meet their educational needs.
Learning goal: Promote effective policies and practices (that achieve outcome)
Achieved by:
Readings on identifying educational needs of youth in foster care and accessing appropriate services
Case analysis
Class exercise
Written assignment
26. Unit 3: Family & Child well-being Well-being Outcome 3: Children and youth receive adequate services to meet their physical and mental heath needs.
Learning goal: Promote effective policies and practices (that achieve outcome)
Achieved by:
Readings on identifying mental health service needs of children in family foster care
Case analysis
Class exercise
Written assignment
27. Unit 4: Evaluation and improvement of child welfare systems Continuous quality improvement initiatives
Wisconsin DCF Quality Service Review program
Review sample report
Child and family service reviews
Review 2010 Wisconsin CFSR Round 2 report
Guest speaker
Program improvement plans
Review 2010 Wisconsin PIP
28. Unit 5: Trauma-informed child welfare practice Assessing child trauma
Essentials of trauma-informed child welfare practice
Guest speaker
29. Sample exercise: Family reunification Setting: Wisconsin County, post-CFSR
Three overall strategies developed to improve family reunification services:
Remove practice-level barriers.
Adopt “promising practices”.
Improve visitation options.
30. Sample exercise: Family reunification Group 1: Manager, supervisors and case managers identify strategies to remove practice-level barriers to family reunification.
Group 2: Supervisors develop strategies to implement promising practices in family reunification.
Group 3: Agency staff, foster parents, biological parents and therapist develop visitation guidelines and plan for visitation center.
31. Approach to teaching Preparation
Assigned readings and class exercise
Lecture / discussion of key points
Bring at least 2 comments / questions
Activity
Expect to participate in fairly complex small group exercises in every class
Review / debrief
Expect to present the work of your group and summarize what you learned tonight
32. Questions / Comments Questions
Comments
Share an idea
Email Matthew Mattila, ACSW, CISW
mattilam@uwgb.edu for copy of syllabus