Stages of Policy Change
Agenda Setting & Advocacy
Policy Implementation & Evaluation
History of the Voluntary Sector
Voluntary Sector Today
Social Work & Policy Impact
100

Define 'problem identification.'

What is identifying a significant issue and its root cause before proposing solutions.

100

Define 'agenda setting.'

What is the stage where advocates decide 'what is to be decided' and convince lawmakers to prioritize the issue.

100

What happens after a bill is passed?

What is implementation begins, but vague language or loopholes may cause issues.

100

Define 'scientific charity.'

What is a method developed by COS in the 1800s to study and address poverty scientifically.

100

Define 'social entrepreneurship.

What is applying business strategies to create innovative solutions for social issues.

100

What roles do social workers play in policy?

What are Advocate, Educator, Organizer.

200

What % of bills in Congress become law?

What is only about 5–10% of bills introduced in Congress.

200

Why is it hard for marginalized groups to get on the agenda?

What is limited legislative space and competing issues mean marginalized communities struggle to gain attention.

200

Define 'policy formulation.'

What is drafting a proposal into a bill or resolution.

200

Role of COS in 1800s.

What is they organized relief efforts and sought to distinguish 'worthy' from 'unworthy' poor.

200

Give one example of government-voluntary sector collaboration.

What is partnerships in disaster relief or health services delivery. Or another example.

200

Define 'secondhand validators.'

What is helping marginalized people amplify their voices in policy spaces.

300

List the six stages.

What is Problem Identification, Agenda Setting, Policy Formulation, Policy Passage, Policy Implementation, Policy Evaluation.

300

Give 2 strategies to get on agenda.

What is join advocacy organizations with lobbyists and use media to spotlight issues.

300

2 types of legislative measures besides bills.

What is concurrent & simple resolutions (symbolic, not laws).

300

Name a traditional provider in the voluntary sector.

What is religious organizations, settlement houses, or mutual aid societies.

300

How does the voluntary sector address marginalization.

What is by filling service gaps for groups not well-served by government.

300

Provide an example of advocacy in action.

What is lobbying for child welfare reform or housing rights.

400

How can stages overlap in real-world policy?

What is stages often repeat or overlap due to political negotiations, public opinion shifts, or implementation challenges.

400

What’s a legislative champion?

What is a sponsor who supports and advances your policy proposal.

400

What 3 questions guide evaluation.

What is 1. Did it work? 2. Did the target population benefit? 3. Were there harmful consequences?

400

How did philanthropy shape the independent sector.

What is large donations helped expand services beyond government support.

400

What is one challenge faced today by the voluntary sector?

What is sustainability of funding and reliance on philanthropy.

400

How do social workers influence agenda-setting?

What is by framing issues and connecting lawmakers with affected communities.

500

Why is evaluation critical?

What is it determines whether the policy achieved its intended outcomes and identifies unintended consequences.

500

Example of media influence.

What is news coverage of child abuse or bullying pushed these issues onto the agenda.

500

Example of unintended policy consequences.

What is Loopholes in healthcare laws leading to uneven coverage or a similar example.

500

Provide an example of pauperism response.

What is charity societies aimed to eliminate pauperism through structured relief.

500

What is the role of social justice in the voluntary sector?

What is drives equity-focused programming and advocacy.

500

Why are social workers essential to bridging voluntary and policy spheres?

What is they bring frontline insights into policy debates and connect communities to systemic change.

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