Child Welfare
Social Work Roles
Resources
Social Work Skills
History
100

What are the different types of child maltreatment?

1. Child physical abuse

2. Child sexual abuse

3. Child neglect

4. Child psychological maltreatment

100

What are some roles that social workers can have?

Broker

Case Manager

Navigator

Researcher

Counselor

Mediator

100

How do social workers learn about people experiencing poverty?

They talk to, interact with, and learn from people who are actually in poverty. They can also study poverty in classrooms and textbooks.

100

Define advocacy and give an example. 

"activities that secure services for and promote the rights of individuals, groups, organizations, and communities. Advocacy covers everything from ensuring special educational services for a child with learning disabilities to presenting facts about poverty and needy Americans before the U.S. Congress. Social workers intercede in not only cases but causes" (textbook p. 55)

100

What do conservatives vs. liberals typically believe about social policy?

Conservatives: personal responsibility, "bootstraps" mentality

Liberals: larger social safety net, more government involvement

200

What are the characteristics of neglect?

"Failing to meet a child's basic needs." (Miller-Perrin & Perrin, 2009, p. 152). Child neglect can include but is not limited to failing to meet physical, emotional, educational, and medical needs." (textbook p. 424)

200

What are some examples of low-income assistance programs?

SNAP

TANF

Medicaid

SSI

Section 8 Housing 

WIC

200

Explain the eligibility criteria for Healthy Meals for Healthy Americans.

"To be eligible, women and their children must be at nutritional risk and have income below state standards for measuring need. The majority of Healthy Meals for Healthy Americans provide vouchers that women use at authorized food stores." (textbook p. 214)

200

What skills are important for crisis social workers?

Do quick assessments to gauge immediate needs.

200

What is the difference between the "deserving poor" and the "undeserving poor"?

Established by the Elizabethan Poor Laws:

Deserving: Orphans, elderly, people who cannot provide for themselves through no fault of their own

Undeserving: Able-bodied vagrants, drunks, lazy people; people who were perceived as being able to work but choosing not to.

300

Where can child welfare workers work?

DCS

Family-based services

Foster care agencies

Adoption services

Residential care

Intensive treatment centers

300

What is evidence based practice (EBP)?

A combination of using clinical experience, research evidence, and client needs or preferences to create informed patient care plans 

300

Explain the difference between Medicaid and Medicare.

Medicaid: "pays for medical and hospital services for people who cannot afford them. Eligibility is based on income level and inability to pay for healthcare insurance." 

Medicare: "When people age beyond 65, they become eligible for Medicare. The U.S. national insurance health care program for everyone older than 65, includes coverage for hospital stays (extended hospital care), home health services, hospice care, and voluntary medical insurance (e.g., doctor's fees, outpatient services)." 

(textbook p. 470)

300

What is intersectionality?

"the entirety of a person's dimensions of difference and social identities. Most diversity includes a complex range or intersection of issues, not simply one. A person may be a poor, old, white, gay, Jewish man who was born with polio and lives in an urban environment. Or a person may be a single, middle-aged, Christian woman who emigrated from India and works as a nurse in a rural setting." (textbook pp. 49-50)

300

What were the orphan trains? 

A form of mutual aid that transported orphaned children from eastern America to all over America, Canada, and Mexico to new families from the 1850s to early 1900s

400

What is the purpose of the child welfare system?

"The practices and policies, and services put in place to promote child well-being and safety are generally referred to as child welfare. Child welfare includes a complex array of services provided by publicly funded child welfare agencies. Child protective services, programs through which social workers, law enforcement personnel, and health care workers respond to reports of child maltreatment, are a key component in publicly funded child welfare agencies." (textbook p. 241)

400

What are the six core values in the Code of Ethics

1. Service

2. Social Justice

3. Integrity

4. Competence

5. Dignity and worth of the person

6. Importance of human relationships

400

What is managed care?

"a type of health care system created to manage, or contain, health care costs. Managed care is offered primarily through the private sector, although Medicaid and Medicare are also forms of managed care." (textbook p. 293)

Ex: HMOs, PPOs

400

True of False: social workers balance the use of closed- and open-ended questions

TRUE!

400

What was social insurance?

"Programs to prevent poverty, usually referred to as social insurance - such as Social Security and workers' compensation - were designated to reward work and were funded through payroll deductions." (textbook p. 208)

500

What are the similarities and differences between child welfare agencies and family service agencies?

"The mission of child welfare agencies is to promote the safety, well-being, and best interests of children. Meanwhile, the mission of family service agencies is to provide programs and services to support and strengthen during challenges and transitions." (textbook p. 247)

500

What is the difference between generalist social work and clinical social work? What kind of degrees/licenses do you need for each of those roles?

1. Generalist: can do with a BSW, many roles

2. Clinical: MSW, then get supervision/licensure for LCSW, more specific

500

Explain what employee assistance programs are.

They focus on "Managing conflicts and providing information, referrals, and counseling to people experiencing problems with their physical or mental health" (textbook p. 392)

500

What is the strengths-based perspective and how do social workers use it?

"The strengths perspective gives credence to the idea that every person has strengths to call on in solving their problems." (textbook p. 129). Social workers use this to build rapport, listen to clients, collaborate with clients, and hold their clients in unconditional positive regard.

500

What was the effect of the Great Depression on social policy?

It changed what people thought about social welfare. Before this event, they were anti-assistance. But when hard times happened for everyone, this inspired a lot of people to shift their perspectives.