SW 100: Chapter 9
Adoption Process
-child identified as being in need of adoption -child must be legally freed so adoption can take place -adoptive parents are selected -agency places the child with them -family reconfiguring itself and intra-family relationships to accommodate new child
Characterization of Family Preservation Programs
-crisis orientation -focus on family -home-based services -time limits -limited, focused objectives -intensive, comprehensive services -emphasis on education and skill building -coordination -flexibility -accessibility -accountability
Possible Causes of Child Maltreatment
-need for personal support and nurturance -need to overcome isolation and establish social contacts -need to learn appropriate parenting skills -need to improve self-esteem
Child Neglect
-the failure of a parent, guardian, or other caregiver to provide for a child's basic needs -may be: physical, medical, educational, emotional
Goals of Child Welfare
-meeting vulnerable children's unmet emotional, behavioral, and health needs -improving internal family conditions involving interpersonal dynamics, communication, substance abuse, and conflict -safeguarding children from various forms of neglect and abuse -when necessary, making permanent family living conditions available through adoption or transfer of guardianship
Family Preservation Services
Short-term, family-based services designed to assist families in crisis by improving parenting and family functioning while keeping children safe
Child Welfare
The traditional term for the network of policies and programs designed to empower families, promote a healthy environment, protect children, and meet children's needs
Residential Care
Treatment provided by child welfare agencies that reflects greater intensity and restrictiveness on the substitute care continuum than foster family care
Stepfamily
family structure in which either or both spouses have been married before and have one or more children from the previous marriage
Blood-Related Adoptions
include a step-parent married to a birth parent adopting the birth parent's child, grandparents adopting daughter/sons child, and other relatives adopting a child born into some branch of their own family
Support Services
involve a wide-range of programs providing assistance in helping parents undertake their daily tasks and assume their responsibilities
Special Needs Adoptions
involves children who have traditionally been more difficult to place in adoptive homes
Physical Abuse
a child younger than 18 has experienced an injury asa result of having been hit with a hand or other object or having been kicked, shaken, thrown, burned, stabbed, or choked by a parent or parent-surrogate
Single-parent Family
a family unit consisting of one adult, and his or her children.
Informal Kinship Care
a situation where a family takes children in without intervention by social service agencies
Substitute Services
those replacing another family for the child's own family, so that someone else takes over all aspects of the parental role on a temporary or permanent basis
Parental Aides
trained professionals, sometimes volunteers, who go into the home, serve as positive role models for behavior management and parent-child relationships, and provide someone for the parents to talk to
Terrorizing
verbally assaults the child, creates a climate of fear, bullies and frightens the child, and makes child believe the world is hostile and unsafe
Kinship Care
the placement of children in the home of a relative, close family friend, godparents, or tribe or clan member when the children's parents are unable to provide care
Child Maltreatment
the umbrella term for physical abuse, sexual abuse, psychological abuse, neglect, and psychological maltreatment
Transracial Adoption
those by parents of a different race than that of the child
Day-care Centers
Agencies that can care for from 15 to 300 children, although they average about 60
International Adoption
parents adopt children from other countries
Primary Group
people who are intimate and have frequent face-to-face contact with one another, have norms in common, and share mutually enduring and extensive influences
Family
primary group whose members assume certain obligations for each other and generally share common residences
Big Brother/Big Sister and Adopted Grandparent Programs
programs where volunteers are paired with a child and, under supervision, offer that child guidance and friendships
Subsidized Adoption
adoptions involving financial assistance
Formal Kinship Care
A situation where a social services agency gains legal custody of a child and places that child in a kinship home, which it licenses
Child Protective Services (CPS)
Interventions aimed at protecting children at risk of maltreatment
Unrelated Adoptions
Occur when the adoptive parents have no prior blood link to the child being adopted
Shelter Homes
Provide a transitory haven for children during assessment and placement
Legal Custody
The formal assumption of caregiving responsibilities for a child (or for persons who are not children but who cannot function independently) including meeting that person's daily needs
Family Structure
The nuclear family as well as those non-traditional alternatives to nuclear family which are adopted by persons in committed relationships and the people they consider to be family
Foster Family Care
The provision of substitute care with a family for a planned temporary or extended period when parents or legal guardians are unable to care for a child
Day Care
The regular provision of care for children or others dependent on help when regular caregivers must work or be away from the home
Child Day Care
agency or program that provides supervision and care for children while parents or guardian are at work or otherwise unavailable
Treatment Milieu
an all encompassing environmental setting, in which rules for how to behave are more clearly specified than in most families, thus providing greater structure
Blended Family
any nontraditional configuration of people who live together, are committed to each other, and perform functions traditionally assumed by families
Independent Adoption
are initiated and conducted ind. by the adoption and birth parents, without agency involvement
Denying Emotional Responsiveness
being detached and uninvolved, interacting only when absolutely necessary, and failing to express love and affection to the child
Spurning
belittling, degrading, shaming, ridiculing; singling out one child to do most of the household chores or to criticize and punish; and publicly humiliating refusing to help a child who asks for or needs help
Residential Treatment Center
bigger agencies that are more structured and therefore more restrictive than smaller group home settings
Isolating
caregiver cuts the child off from normal social experiences, prevents the child from forming friendships, and makes the child believe he/she is alone in the world
Permanent Placement
comprehensive care planning process directed toward the goal of a permanent, stable home for a child
Agency/Relinquishment Adoptions
conducted through a public or private social service organization, with the agency contracting with the adoptive parents, providing counseling, assessing the placement, and overseeing the entire adoption process
Family Life Education (FLE)
involves group or classroom learning experiences for the purpose of increasing people's knowledge, developing skills, or enhancing self-awareness concerning issues and crisis relevant at some point during the life span
Exploiting or Corrupting
modeling, permitting, or encouraging such antisocial behavior as prostitution, performance in pornography, criminal activity, or substance abuse; and encouraging developmentally inappropriate behavior such as parentification or infantilization
Long-Term Foster Homes
offer an ongoing residence for children unable to return to their parents' home and unadaptable for various reasons
Generational Family
one in which family members include persons spanning at least three generations
Treatment Foster Care
provides specialized treatment for children with serious behavioral and emotional problems
Psychological Neglect
repeated pattern of behavior that conveys to a child he/she is unwanted, worthless, valued only to the extent he/she can meet others' needs or is threatened with physical or psychological attack
Specialized Foster Homes
serve children with special needs, such as intellectual disabilities or conditions such as fetal alcohol syndrome or being infected with HIV
Group Homes
setting that provides a substitute living situation and family environment for a group of children originating in different families
Independant Living Services
settings that serve as a traditional residence between out-of-home placement and entrance into adulthood with its onerous responsibilities
Supportive Services
support, reinforce, and strengthen the ability of parents and children to meet the responsibilities of their respective statuses
Respite Care
temporary provision of care for those requiring such care so the regular caregivers have some time away from caregiving responsibilities
Adoption
the legal act of taking in a child born to other parents and formally making that child a full member of the family
Guardianship
the legal responsibility to care for another person and oversee that person's affairs