Exploring Child Welfare: A Practice PerspectivePearson A and B, 2007 - 458 páginas Overview: Exploring Child Welfare provides an overall look at the provision of services for children and their families, from services that enhance and support family life to those that substitute for the child's own home. The Fourth Edition of this accessible and engaging text continues to reflect the author's strong practice perspective and incorporates new developments in welfare reform and child welfare services. The author bases her work on more than 30 years of experience in almost all areas of children's services, including protective services, foster care, adoption, court services, residential treatment and school-based services. What Reviewers Are Saying: ""[The writing style] is probably the number one reason I choose this textbook. I especially like the way [the author] incorporate[s] the case studies into the chapter. This allows the students to easily make the connection between the material presented and "real life." I have not had a student complain about reading this text!!"" -Sandy Cook-Fong, University of Nebraska at Kearney " " ""The text examples/cases are candid representations of child welfare systems, client and/or service circumstances, and other valuable case histories that provide students the ability to develop professional competence and personal integrity....As an instructor and professional within the human service field, this text has become a valuable reference and resource tool for myself and my students."" -Kathleen M. Gutowski, Baker College ""Strengths: accessibility of material, suitability for BSW [students], cases geared to generalist agency practice, comprehensive, but not overwhelming, holistic orientation." " -Karen A. Ford, James Madison University [ Insert MyHelpingLab Advertisement ] |
De dentro do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 78
Página 14
... requires some adjustments , especially for single mothers . Some parents find themselves in the midst of role transition ... require the child welfare system to intervene . If the family cannot be helped to deal with these problems and ...
... requires some adjustments , especially for single mothers . Some parents find themselves in the midst of role transition ... require the child welfare system to intervene . If the family cannot be helped to deal with these problems and ...
Página 126
... requires states to provide public educa- tion for children with disabilities ages 3 to 21 , it seems logical that many ... require a developmental history that the parent must fill out , and this is added to the child's record . One role ...
... requires states to provide public educa- tion for children with disabilities ages 3 to 21 , it seems logical that many ... require a developmental history that the parent must fill out , and this is added to the child's record . One role ...
Página 344
... require expensive medication , medical procedures , or therapeutic services can still benefit from an adoptive home . Single - parent adoptions , which gained popularity in the 1960s and 70s , are still in vogue today . The assumption ...
... require expensive medication , medical procedures , or therapeutic services can still benefit from an adoptive home . Single - parent adoptions , which gained popularity in the 1960s and 70s , are still in vogue today . The assumption ...
Conteúdo
Our Most Important Resource | 1 |
The Changing Family | 23 |
Children and Poverty | 63 |
Direitos autorais | |
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abuse and neglect addition adolescents adoptive parents adults African American agency alcohol Asian assessment attachment disorder baby become behavior birth parents caregivers chil Child Abuse child protection child welfare Children's Defense Fund counseling counselor couples Crosson-Tower culture daycare delinquent disabilities dren drugs early effective emotional example factors family members father feel foster care foster homes foster parents gangs genogram Hispanic homeless impact increased individual institutions intervention involved issues juvenile court kids kinship living maltreatment ment mental health Native American needs number of children offenders peers placed placement poor poverty poverty line Prevention problems programs relationships reported require residential setting residential treatment risk role school counselor sexual abuse siblings Siegel skills social worker society staff status offenses substance abuse TANF teachers teen pregnancy Teenage therapy tion types violence women York young youths