230 QUESTIONS AND CORRECT DETAILED ANSWERS
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What is the purpose? - ANSWER: Provides an overview of knowledge prerequisite for
direct child welfare practice in Illinois.
What is the Strength-Based practice? - ANSWER: helps families identify and build on
their planning services.
What is the focus for all Child and Family Team Meeting? - ANSWER: planning for
permanency.
What is collaboration? - ANSWER: Involvement of the family in all aspects of case
planning.
What is Open Participation? - ANSWER: parents select who they wan to be a part of
their Child and Family Team.
What is Full Disclosure? - ANSWER: Family members need to have all of the info
disclosed to them so they can make their own decisions.
What are the fundamental outcomes of all child welfare practice? - ANSWER:
Permanency, Safety, and Well being of children
What is practice? - ANSWER: the means by which individuals and families are helped
to change their behaviors and circumstances.
What is the art of social work practice? - ANSWER: the ability to successfully balance
concerns for child safety with concerns for the emotional security and the
importance of family to children for whom safety is sought.
What are the tasks and competencies of social work practice? - ANSWER: the combo
of knowledge, skills, and behaviors reflect the attitudes and values that support
consistent appropriate choices of action-leading to the child's safety, health, and
well being.
What is the Illinois Core Practice Model anchored in? - ANSWER: Family Centered
Trauma Informed and Strength Based approach, FTS.
What are the 9 Core Child Welfare Principles? - ANSWER: 1. Serve as an agent of
change
2. Forming a helping relationship
3. Initial and Ongoing Assessment
,4. Provide information about impact of trauma
5. Advocacy
6. Behavioral Support
7. Linkage
8. Coordinate
9. Cultural Competence
What is Family Centered Practice? - ANSWER: Focuses on helping children remain
connected to their parents, extended family, and others who are significant relatives
families strengths and the importance of reflecting with family members. Respect
the rights, values, and culture of families.
What is trauma informed practice? - ANSWER: seeks to view kids and families with a
trauma lens and understand the impact of trauma on a child's development and
behavior.
what should be the center of our casework? - ANSWER: child and family team
meetings CFTM
what is engagement? - ANSWER: obtaining more info about the family's history and
poetential member for the child and family team. As we receive more info about the
family we will be adding to the CFS458B.
Who needs a child welfare license? - ANSWER: By Jan 1, 2000 the IDCFS and private
child welfare agencies developed and implemented a CWEL. Those providing direct
child welfare services in Illinois.
What are some benefits of child visitation? - ANSWER: 1. Provide us with additional
opportunities to evaluate progress towards permanency.
2. During visits, parents have the opportunity to apply newly acquired skills and
receive feedback.
3. visits also provide professional involved with the family opportunites to identify
strengths and give feedback about attempts to utilize new parenting approaches
4. ongoing family interactions provide opportunities to help maintain specific cultural
traditions or practices that are important to the child and family and may be support
for them.
What does medical trauma refer to - ANSWER: serious or critical bodily injury,
wound, or shock
pyschiatrically trauma - ANSWER: child's experience of an event that is emotionally
painful, distressful, or shocking, which often results in lasting mental and physical
effects.
what is the ratio of children who witness violence? - ANSWER: 4 out of 10
, what ratio of kids who will experience a traumatic event by their 16th birthday? -
ANSWER: 1 in 4
what is psychological first aid pfa - ANSWER: it is an evidence-informed approach for
assisting people in the immediate aftermath of a loss, disaster, or exposure to
trauma and terrorism.
what will the pfa approach assist with - ANSWER: 1. reducing initial distress
2. fostering short term adaptive functioning
3. fostering long-term adaptive functioning
what are the types of trauma? - ANSWER: sexual abuse, physical, psychological
maltreatment, neglect, community violence, school violence, domestic, traumatic
grief, natural or man-made disaster, terrorism, medical trauma, and refugee trauma.
what are adverse childhood experiences- aces? - ANSWER: 1. recurrent physical
abuse
2. recurrent emotional abse
3. sexual abuse
4. emotional or physical neglect
5. an alcohol or drug abuser
6. incarcerated household member
7. someone who is chronically depressed, suicidal, institutionalized or mentally ill
8. mother being treated violently
9. one or no biological parents
10. removal from biological parents
11. unplanned placement moves
12. three or more placements in an 18 month period
what are the lifelong effects of trauma? - ANSWER: mental health affects, substance
abuse, HIV/STD risks, physical health, trauma and academics.
responses to trauma in infants? - ANSWER: eating disturbances, irritable- difficulty
soothing, developmental regression, language delay, attachment disorder, failure to
thrive, sleep disturbance.
responses to trauma in young children? - ANSWER: helplesness and passivity,
generalized fear, confusion, difficulty planning, difficulty identifying what is
bothering them, attributing magical qualities to traumatic reminders, fighting or
threatening behavior, attention problems, sadness/depression, separation anxiety,
specific fears.
responses to trauma in adolescents? - ANSWER: antisocial behavior, runaway,
depression/suicidal, sleep disorders, absenteeism, acting like a parent to siblings,
eating disorders, dating violence, substance abuse, school failure, relationship
problems.