Child Protective Investigator Study Quiz
What does Behavior Management consist of?
Behavior modification, stress reduction, supervising and monitoring.
Behavioral conditioning, cognitive awareness, and Structural assessment.
Behavior reduction, stress modification, supervising and evaluating.
Behavior management, stress reduction, supervising and monitoring.
What does Crisis Management consist of?
Crisis resolution and prompt problem solving to control present danger.
Crisis reduction, event reduction, observing, and decision making.
Alleviate all possible stressors to reduce further crisis evolution.
Crisis resolution and permanent problem solving to control present danger.
What are Diversion Services used for?
In a case where children are determined safe but there is a high risk.
In a case where children need services but issues arise that stop them from happening.
In a case where children are determined at risk but outside factors will affect the decision.
In a case where children are determined in danger but there is a low risk.
When is Case Management required?
It is required in cases in which children are determined unsafe, regardless of the level of risk.
In all cases.
When a child is considered safe.
It is required in cases in which children are determined safe, regardless of level of risk.
When is a child considered a Safe Child?
When there is no present or impending danger to the child.
When all criteria of a Safety Plan have been met.
When you show up and nothing is wrong with the child.
When there is danger present but a safety plan is in place.
What information is needed to assess risk?
Negative family conditions and/ or circumstances that place a at risk child of maltreatment.
Positive family formations and negative events happening.
Which collaterals can be verified.
Would you do the same thing in the case you are assigned.
What is a Risk Assessment used for?
To consider the likelihood of future maltreatment.
To decide if we are going to shelter the child.
To consider if the Alleged Perpetrator will still be around the child.
To decide if we need to be involved.
Why is the risk assessment completed?
To consider the likelihood of the family to be back involved with the department.
To consider what level of maltreatment is happening.
To decide if the level of maltreatment is pertinent to an investigation.
To decide if the neighbors will tell you if maltreatment has occurred.
When is the Initial Risk Assessment conducted?
It is completed at the conclusion of the FFA/ Investigation.
It is completed after discussing the case with the lead investigator.
It is completed at the beginning of the FFA/ Investigation.
It is completed after a meeting with legal and leadership.
What are Caregiver Protective Capacities?
Personal and parenting behaviors, cognitive, and emotional characteristics which are specifically and directly associated with protecting one's child.
To determine if a caregiver can properly take care of a child.
To decide if parents are in need of services.
Personal and parenting attitudes, thoughts, and feelings which are somewhat, and semi associated with helping one's child.
How many domains are in the FFA and what are they?
Seven. Extent of abuse, child behaviors, parent employment, parental history, history of maltreatment, safety measures needed, and sibling history.
Four. One fish, Two fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish.
Six. Extent of maltreatment, nature of maltreatment, child fun ctioning, adult fun ctioning, general parenting, and parental discipline/behavior management.
Five. Extent of maltreatment, child functioning, adult functioning, parent general, and parenting discipline.
What are the four special condition referrals?
Caregiver unavailable, Foster Care Referral, Child On Child (COC) sexual abuse, and parents needing assistance.
Physical or mental risk, Alleged Perpetrator still around child, Death of a child, and Financial bankruptcy.
Caregiver is under the influence, Sheltered child, Child On Child (COC) sexual abuse, and release of parental rights.
Foster care, Alleged perpetrator missing, Child taken out of state, and death of a child.
What is Dependence?
The characteristic most associated with vulnerability to present or impending danger.
The level a child depends on a caregiver.
How much interaction a caregiver and child have emotional, cognitively, and behaviorally.
A deciding factor when placing a child in care.
Physical attending includes what two aspects?
Use of environment and body language.
Use of facial expressions and body postioning.
Use of eye contact and physical touch.
Use of body posture and positioning.
Present Danger can occure when?
Anytime during an investigation.
It happens before an investigation opens.
Throughout an investigation.
Only after it is determined there is present danger.
What are the considerations for an unsafe child?
Danger threat, vulnerable child, diminished caregiver, and protective capacities.
High, medium, and low risk.
Maltreatment, misuse, and abuse.
Danger, Threat level, Caregiver capacities, and protection type.
How many components of vulnerability are there, and what are they?
Five. Age, dependence, personality of child, interactions with family, and ability to manage own emotions.
Five. Mental capacity, physical capability, emotional stability, financial stability, and family structure.
Three. Emotional, cognitive, and behavioral.
One. One ring to rule them all, one ring to find them, one ring to bring them all, and in the darkness bind them.
How many ages and stages of child development and what are they? (Two answers)
Four. 0-3 years, 3-6 years, 6-12 years, and 13-18 years.
Four. Infant, toddler, youth, adolescence.
Four. 0-4 years, 5-11 years, 12-18 years.
Four. Birth to three, pre-school, school age, and adolescence.
What is CAPTA, when was it passed, and what did it do?
Child Abuse Prevention Treatment Act of 1974. It transitioned federal government into a leadership role in the protection of children.
Child Abuse Prevention Treatment Act of 1975. It transitioned federal government into a protective role in the defense of children.
Child Abuse Prevention Treatment Act of 1874. It transitioned federal government into a leadership role in the protection of children.
Child Advocation and Protection Act of 1974. It transitioned federal government into a protective role in the protection of children.
What is ASFA, when was it enacted, and what does it do?
Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997. It clearly and unequivocally established three national goals for children in foster care: safety, permanency, and well-being.
Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997. It clearly and unequivocally established three national goals for children in child care: Behavioral, cognitive, and emotional care.
Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1992. It clearly and definitively established three national goals for children in foster care: safety, well-being, and happiness.
Advocation and Stable Families Act of 1994. It clearly and unequivocally establishes three state wide goals for children in foster care: safety, permanency, and well-being.
What is ICPC and what does it do?
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children. It establishes procedures for all states when placing children across state lines.
Insane Clown Posse Club. Down to Clown with the dark ones and drink faygo.
Interstate Compact on the Placing of Children. It establishes procedures for all counties when placing children across state lines.
Internal Compact on the Placement of Children. It establishes procedures for all states when placing children across state lines.
What is MEPA and what does it do?
Multi Ethnic Placement Act. It prohibits delay or denial of any adoption or placement in foster care due to the race, color, or national origin of the child.
Multi Ethical Placement Act. It prohibits delay or denial of any adoption or placement in foster care due to the race, color, or national origin of the child.
Multi Ethnic Participation Act. It prohibits the denial or delay of any child being cared for due to race, color, or national origin of the child.
Multi Ethical Placement Act. It prohibits the delay of any adoption in foster care due to the race, color, or nationality of the child.
What is ICWA and what does it do?
Indian Child Welfare Act. It protects Native American heritage under federal law.
Indian Children Wellness Act. It protects Native American heritage under federal law.
Indian Child Welfare Act. It defends Native Americans heritage under state laws.
Indian Child Wellness Act. It protects Native American heritage under federal law.
Offending parents should be seen within how long?
72 hours.
36 hours.
24 hours.
96 hours.
When does assessing occur?
It is continual and dynamic.
All the time.
Only when needed.
When your supervisor reminds you.
What is a family centered practice?
Display empathy, respect, and encourage participation, and involvement.
Going to the arcade every weekend as a family.
Teach, learn, and mirror positive behaviors.
To decide if family services will help a family or not.
What are the legislative goals for dependent children?
Safety, permanency, and well-being.
To not have the needs of family services any more.
To not need government assistance in a family.
Safety, positivity, and closure.
What does it mean to be least intrusive?
The least amount of interference possible when helping a family.
To not be around while a family gets better.
When a family doesn't feel the need to ask for help.
To interfere as much as possible.
What is maltreatment?
A behavior that is harmful and destructive to a child's cognitive, social, or emotional behavior.
A behavior that causes a child to act out in public.
A behavior that is helpful and means well to a child's cognitive, social, or emotional behavior.
A behavior that is the result of your child driving you up a wall.
What is the Child Maltreatment Index?
A tool that provides a description of and factors to consider for each specific maltreatment.
A tool used to show you the best ways to discipline your child.
Something not needed once you're and established Child Protective Invstigator.
A tool that provides a factor and decides what maltreatment can become in the future.
What are the three different findings that address if maltreatment has occured?
Verified, not substantiated, and no indicators.
Villians, no do gooders, and good guys.
Verifiable, substantiated, and no indicators.
Verified, not substantiated, and indicators.
What does FFA stand for and what does it do?
Family Fun ctioning Assessment. It is used to identify where children are unsafe and in the need for ongoing case management services.
Family Findings Assessment. It is used to identify where children are safe and do not need ongoing case management services.
Family Functioning Assessment. It is used to identify where maltreatment occurs in adults to make them abuse children.
Family Findings Assessment. It is used to identify where children are unsafe and in the need for ongoing case management services.
How many danger threats are there?
11.
12.
10.
13.
All unsafe cases involving DV require how many safety plans?
Two.
Three.
One.
None. They will already be in jail.
What is abuse?
A willful or threatening act.
Something that happens when kids are really really REALLYYY bad.
An unwillful and harmless act.
A willful and unseen act.
What is Complex Trauma?
A.) Simultaneous occurrence of child maltreatment.
B.) Sequential occurrence of maltreatment.
C.) None of the above.
D.) Both A and B.
What are the long term impacts of trauma?
Developmental delays, higher rates of delinquency, increased adult psychological problems, and increased rates of child drug and alcohol use.
When you just can't stand it and its not just a phase mom....
Developmental critical detriment, increased drug use, psychological adaptations to the systematic relief portion.
Developmental increase, lower delinquency rates, increased mental problems, increased sexual drive.
What may the results of substance abuse be?
A disinhibitor for parents, can lead to illegal activity, drain family resources, and may impair child caring behaviors.
An inhibitor for parents, can lead to legal activity, fills family resources, doesn't impair child caring behaviors.
May lead to sexual abuse or other trauma.
Can determine if a child is taken into state custody.
What are the Essential Practice Skills?
Teaming, assessing, and understanding.
Building, restructuring, and accounting.
Helping, guiding, and resurfacing.
Teaming, assorting, evaluating.
CPT reports should be received in how many days?
Ten days.
Five days.
Three days.
Two days.
The health and safety of the children served by our agency are of...
Paramount concern.
Paramore discussion.
Paramount consideration.
Paramore discussions.
What does ACE stand for?
Adverse Childhood Experience.
Adverse Clinical Experience.
Acute Childhood Experience.
Adverse Childhood Expertise.
What is the relationship between risk factors and danger threats?
All danger threats have risk factors but not all risk factors have danger threats.
All risk factors have danger threats but not all danger threats have risk factors.
Its kind of on and off. Dont ask them about it.
Danger threats and risk factors share many like factors.
What is a Ludwig Staffing?
Staffing with case management and legal in incidents which it will be determined if an unborn child should be sheltered.
When you attend the professor's class to learn Wingardium Leviosa.
Staffing with case management and legal in incidents which it will be determined if a child will become a successful adult.
Staffing with case management and legal to decide if children should be allowed to be around the Alleged Perpetrator.
What significant events impact the brain caused by trauma?
Terrorism, natural disasters, physical abuse, and sexual abuse.
When your Karen neighbor calls the cops on your daughters Quinceanera.
Collapse of the stock market, parents arguing, global warming, running out of milk.
Racism, insurance fraud, physical punishment, and emotional abuse.
People with limited cognitive function are more reliant on what?
Concrete and literal thinking.
Family and friends to help them through life.
Medical assistance for life.
Differential and indirect thinking.
What are the developmental disabilities?
Cognitive, severe, and chronic.
Emotional, behavioral, and cognitive.
The disabilities which inhibit normalcy in childhood.
Behavorial, severe, routine.
What does a Chapter 39 injunction involve?
On behalf of the child, no contact order specifically related to a child and offender (non-biological)
Getting child victims away from an Alleged Perpetrator.
Having an alleged perpetrator mandatory to show up to court.
Being in the misguidance of court, to not allow the Alleged Perpetrator to see the Child Victim.
What are family dynamics?
Patterns of relation and interactions between family members.
The outcome when a parent and child interact.
Patterns of emotional and behavioral context.
When families decide what's best for themselves.
What is Cultural Competency?
Providing effective services to all people of all cultures, race, ethnic backgrounds, and religion.
Being aware of cultural differences within family dynamics.
Patterns and relations between different cultures.
Participating in cultural practices when investigating a family.
What is cultural sensitivity?
Being aware of cultural differences within family dynamics.
Providing effective service to all people of all cultures, race, ethnic backgrounds, and religion.
Participating in cultural practices at your own home.
Trying out new cultural practices to better understand a culture.
What is the order of the decision making process?
Gather, document, assess, and make decisions.
Document, gather, assess, and make decisions.
Assess, gather, document, and make decisions.
Make decisions, assess, document, and gather information.
What is Engagement?
Active listening and hearing what the family is saying.
What happens right before you get married.
Disregarding what a family is saying and making sure they know your opinion.
Being involved with a family.
What is empathy?
Recognizing a person's experience.
That one thing that's like a taco but its deep fried.
Having the same experience as someone else.
Recognizing when someone has issues.
What is an Adjudicatory hearing?
It gives the parents a chance to be heard and determines if a child has been abused, abandoned, or neglected. It requires preponderance of evidence.
When the court decides if a parent will be able to raise their child.
It gives the child a chance to be heard, informs if the parents were abusive, and requires substantial evidence.
To decide if a child is competent enough to lie about maltreatments.
In what order do you conduct interviews in?
Notify parents, child victim, other children in home, other household members, and alleged perpetrator.
Talk to the children at school and any other children in the household, notify non offending parent, notify alleged perpetrator.
Whichever order is most suitable for the investigation.
In whatever order your supervisor tells you to.
How many phases of an interview are there, and what are they?
Four. Opening, information gathering, planning, and closing.
Three. Opening, information gathering, and closing.
Four. Opening. Intelligence reports, planning, and closing.
Two. Opening and closing.
What is reframing?
It helps someone develop a new perspective about a problem.
When you need to put a new door in your house.
Its similar to reflection but its more involved.
When you dictate to a family what they need to do to fix a problem.
What is an indirect question used for?
It's the best way to start a conversation when talking about a sensitive topic.
Used to beat around the bush to get the right answer.
To direct the conversation the proper way.
Its the incorrect way to start a conversation.
When conducting an interview, questions should go in what order?
From general to specific.
From easiest to hardest.
Family background, child background, housing dynamic. incident.
Whatever order you want.
What are the criteria for a safety plan?
Control/ manage danger threat, immediately effective, immediately accessible/available, contains safety actions, and contain no promissory commitments.
Child safety, sibling safety, household function, parental functions.
Control threat, safety plan, and effective practices.
Whichever are necessary to keep the child safe.
What is a safety plan used for?
As a control for danger.
To make the parents feel better.
To put money in the governments pocket.
To dictate how a family will proceed.
What are the five safety planning analysis criteria?
Willingness, calm and consistent, safety services available, without professional evaluation, and physical living location.
Behavioral management, crisis management, social connections, resource support, and separation safety.
Control/ manage danger threat, immediately effective, immediately accessible/available, contains safety actions, and contain no promissory commitments.
Out of control, observable, severe, imminent, and vulnerable child.
What are the safety management categories?
Behavioral management, crisis management, social connections, resource support, and separation safety.
Willingness, calm and consistent, safety services available, professional evaluation, and physical living location.
Control/ manage danger threat, immediately effective, immediately accessible/available, contains safety actions, and contain no promissory commitments.
Out of control, observable, severe, imminent, and vulnerable child.
What are the two types of safety plans?
Informal and Formal.
In-home and onsite.
Indirect and Direct.
Decisive and Informative.
What are the impending danger threshold criteria's?
Out of control, observable, severe, imminent, and vulnerable child.
Behavioral management, crisis management, social connections, resource support, and separation safety.
Willingness, calm and consistent, safety services available, professional evaluation, and physical living location.
Control danger threat, immediately effective, immediately accessible/available, contains safety actions, and contain no promissory commitments.
How many criteria's must be met for impending danger?
All five.
All four.
Only half of them.
None of them. Its at the discretion of the Child Protective Investigator.
What are the five child abuse indicators?
Age of the child, prior history of injuries to the child, location of injury on the body of the child, multiplicity of injury, and type of trauma inflicted.
Developmental delays, higher rates of delinquency, increased adult psychological problems, and increased rates of child drug and alcohol use.
Age, dependance, personality of child, interactions with family, and ability to manage own emotions.
Danger threat, vulnerable child, diminished caregiver, and protective capacities.
What is the hierarchy of procedure DCF goes by?
US Constitution, Federal Statutes, State Statutes, State Administrative Code, State Rules of Juvenile Procedure, DCF Operating Procedures.
DCF Operating Procedures, Federal Statutes, State Statutes, State Administrative Code, State Rules of Juvenile Procedure, US Constitution.
State Statutes, Federal Statutes, State Administrative Code, State Rules of Juvenile Procedure, and DCF Operating Procedures.
US Constitution, Federal Statutes, State Statutes, State Administrative Code, DCF Operating Procedures, and State Rules of Juvenile Procedure.
What does Chapter 39 do?
Protects children from abuse, abandonment, neglect, and exploitation.
Ensures are children are safe no matter the living situation.
I dont know, I haven't gotten that far yet. Don't spoil it...
Protects children from sexual and physical abuse.
What are the three levels of Burden of Proof?
Probable cause, preponderance of evidence, clear and convincing.
51%, no indicators, and clear and convincing.
No probable cause, ponderance of evidence, clear and convincing.
What are three types of petitions?
Shelter, dependency, and TPR (Termination of Parental Rights).
Shelter, dependency, and probable cause.
No caregiver, probable cause, and shelter.
Dependency, Shelter, and no caregiver.
What causes shelter petitions?
Probable cause, no caregiver available, violation of placement court order, abuse, abandonment, neglect, and exploitation.
Social networking, supervising and monitoring, friendly visiting, and basic parent assistance.
Age of the child, prior history of injuries to the child, location of injury on the body of the child, multiplicity of injury, and type of trauma inflicted.
A disinhibitor for parent, lead to illegal activity, drain family resources, and may impair child caring behaviors.
What provides guidance for children in dependency process?
Chapter 39.
DCF Operating Procedures.
Child Protective Investigator assigned to the case.
Everyone involved.
When do you go to court on a shelter hearing?
Within 24 hours.
Within 12 hours.
Within 72 hours.
As soon as possible.
What did Dr. Kemp come up with and what is it?
Battered Child Syndrome. Intentional trauma or injury that appears to be more severe than could reasonably be expected to result from an accident.
Beaten Child Syndrome. Intentional trauma or injury that appears to be more severe than could reasonably be expected to result from an accident.
Battered Child Syndrome. Unintentional trauma or injury that does not appear to be more severe than could reasonably be expected to result from an accident.
Beaten Child Syndrome. Unintentional trauma or injury that does not appear to be more severe than could reasonably be expected to result from an accident.
What is the criteria for a report to be accepted by the hotline?
Children under the age of 18.
Maltreatment has been observed.
Multiple reports have come in.
There is no criteria for a report.
What is the chain of placement for a child?
Non offending parent, relative, non-relative, and foster care.
Child remains in home, family friend, foster care.
Non offending parent, relative, non-relative, foster care, child remains in home.
Family, friends, foster care.
Caregiver protective capacities are classified as...
Behavioral, cognitive, and emotional.
Utilized for things lacking and manage threats to child's safety.
Non offending parent, relative, non-relative, and foster care.
Patterns of relation and interactions between family members.
What does TPR stand for?
Termination of Parental Rights.
Termination of Practical Rights.
Titillation of Parental Rights.
Termination of Parental Revision.
What is Emotional Protective Capacity?
Specific feelings, attitudes, identification with the child, and motivation that results in protective parenting and protective vigilance.
Specific intellect, knowledge, understanding, and perception that result in protective parenting and protective vigilance.
Specific action, activity, or performance that is consistent with and results in protective parenting and protective vigilance.
What is Cognitive Protective Capacity?
Specific intellect, knowledge, understanding, and perception that result in protective parenting and protective vigilance.
Specific feelings, attitudes, identification with the child, and motivation that results in protective parenting and protective vigilance.
Specific action, activity, or performance that is consistent with and results in protective parenting and protective vigilance.
What is Behavioral Protective Capacity?
Specific action, activity, or performance that is consistent with and results in protective parenting and protective vigilance.
Specific intellect, knowledge, understanding, and perception that result in protective parenting and protective vigilance.
Specific feelings, attitudes, identification with the child, and motivation that results in protective parenting and protective vigilance.
How many maltreatments are there?
27.
23.
12.
11.
Interviews should be conducted in what type of setting?
Individual.
Group.
Over dinner.
Wherever the family is most comfortable.
What is it called when an empathetic reflection of purposeful and positive intention is said?
Reframing.
Rearranging.
Reducing.
Refraction.
When we are exploring difficult situations and circumstances with families the power of _________ is extremely useful...
Silence.
Being blunt.
Being conducive.
Loudness.
To ensure I have an accurate understanding I must...
Trust but verify.
Believe but achieve.
Lie and deny.
Insist and persist.
What is the best type of question used to illicit information from someone?
Open ended question.
Close ended question.
Indirect Question.
Solution focused question.
What is a close ended question?
It can be answered with one or two words.
Encourages people to use their own words and to elaborate on a topic.
Made for the purpose of seeking sensitive information.
Questions that are designed to provide clarity to the problem and possible solutions.
What is an open ended question?
Encourages people to use their own words and to elaborate on a topic.
It can be answered with one or two words.
Made for the purpose of seeking sensitive information.
Questions that are designed to provide clarity to the problem and possible solutions.
What is a solution focused question?
Questions that are designed to provide clarity to the problem and possible solutions.
Made for the purpose of seeking sensitive information.
Encourages people to use their own words and to elaborate on a topic.
It can be answered with one or two words.
What are the child interview types?
Investigative interview, child safety & well-being interview, forensic interview, and therapeutic interview.
Investigative interview, child safety interview, forensic interview, and therapeutic interview.
Investigative interview, child safety & well-being interview, forensic interview, and social interview.
Intentional interview, child safety & well-being interview, forensic interview, and therapeutic interview.
What provides legal evidence for sheltering a child?
Probable cause.
Preponderance of evidence.
No indicators found.
What provides legal evidence for dependency petition?
Preponderance of evidence.
Probable cause.
No evidence found.
Repeated abuse can produce what?
Confusion as to details.
Confusion as to questions.
A child to shut down and not answer.
Confusion of gender orientation.
The ten step investigative interview last four are...
Allegation, allegation follow up, follow up with tell me more and what happened next, and multiple incidents.
Allegation, allegation follow up, follow up with tell me more and what happened next, and single incidents.
Allegation, allegation defense, follow up with tell me more and what happened next, and multiple incidents.
Allegation, allegation follow up, follow up with tell me more and what will happen, and multiple incidents.
What is not an example of effective interview openings?
Respectful greeting.
Purpose explained.
Immediate concerns addressed.
Exploring skills.
What type of child interviews do case managers conduct?
Investigative interviews.
Child safety and well-being interviews.
In home interviews.
Adoption interviews.
Therapeutic interviews are conducted by child protection team professional to determine the child's perception of events and how the events affected the child.
True
False
The purpose of the Family Functioning Assessment is to determine the following:
A.)Present danger condition.
B.) Children are unsafe.
C.) Family needs a daycare referral
D.)Ongoing case management is warranted.
E.) Both B and D.
The surrounding circumstances domain covers the duration, history, patterns of the maltreatment and/or maltreatments, parent/caregiver's intent, unique aspects of and caregiver's acknowledgement of the maltreatment(s):
True
False
Negative behaviors which are actively occurring and require intervention refer to what piece of the present danger criteria?
Clearly observable.
Significant.
Immediate.
Severe.
The actions, behaviors, emotions, or out of control conditions that can be specifically and explicitly described support what piece of the present danger criteria?
Clearly observable.
Significant.
Immediate.
Severe.
Per CFOP children of these ages are automatically considered vulnerable...
Under the age of one.
0-6 years.
All children 17 and under.
0-5.
This piece of present danger criteria is associated with the anticipated harm to the child due to the family condition, child condition, or individual behavior.
Clearly observable.
Significant.
Immediate.
Severe.
How many risk factors are there?
19.
11.
16.
12.
At what junctures are safety plans ALWAYS implemented?
At commencement of the investigation.
At closure of the investigation.
At present or impending danger.
If risk to the child is high or very high.
What is the purpose of present danger safety plans?
Control for safety monitors in the home only.
Manage present danger while completing information collection and Family Functioning Assessment.
Manage present danger while completing information collection for the Risk Assessment.
Informs if the child can be removed from the home on a shelter order.
What is the purpose of impending danger plans?
Manage Impending Danger while allowing treatment and intervention services to occur.
Means that a shelter must occur.
Manage Impending Danger until the department can complete the FFA.
Tell us what treatment the caregivers are receiving.
Child placement should be viewed as a temporary safety management response that is most intrusive.
True
False
Child placement is necessary until threats to a child's safety are gone.
True
False
Which one of these IS NOT one of the four core principles mandated by Florida Statute 39.001 that the Child Welfare System operates from...
The health and safety of the children served shall be of paramount concern.
The prevention and safety is about the family.
The prevention and intervention by the child protection system should engage families in constructive, supportive, and non-adversarial relationships.
The prevention and intervention should intrude as little as possible into the life of the family and be focused on clearly defined objectives.
The prevention and intervention should be based upon outcome evaluation results that demonstrate success in protecting children and supporting families.
The father of a 13-year-old girl has been touching his daughter's breasts over her clothes. The 13-year-old tells her best girlfriend, who tells her mother, who calls the hotline.
Sexual molestation.
Sexual battery.
Sexual exploitation.
Sexual Abuse Child On Child.
Not sexual abuse.
How is meaning in communication most often conveyed?
Tone of voice.
Non-verbal.
Spoken words.
Openness.
"High power/ Low power" body language would be an example of what exploring skill?
Reflection.
Reframing.
Silence.
Attending Behaviors.
When using focusing skills, which question styles are most appropriate?
Open.
Closed.
Indirect.
Solution-focused.
All of the above.
Which of the following is NOT an example of focusing skills?
Frames and cues.
Summarization.
Positive reinforcement.
Information-giving.
_____________ questions explore "tell me about the times when the problem does not occur."
Exception finding.
Solution-focused.
Indirect.
Clarifying.
Investigations can be closed....
When the family request it.
After PI sees victims and finds no danger threats.
Without court approval.
Where the risk is low.
Caregiver states that she never wanted to be a parent and expects her 9-year-old daughter to take care of herself. This information is helpful to...
Inform how the mother disciplines the children.
Address the mother's lack of caregiver protective capacities.
Make your case to obligate the mother to participate in parenting classes.
Inform your assessment of the mother's general parenting capacity.
The caller ID for the reporter can be used when?
Child is a caller.
Self-reporting.
If the family location is unknown.
All of the above.
In which domain do we describe the caregiver's explanation of how the child was injured?
Child functioning.
Adult functioning.
Extent of maltreatment.
Nature of maltreatment.
Discipline/ behavior management.
Engagement skills includes all EXCEPT...
Display empathy and encouragement.
Enlist family to participate in the development of safety plans.
Ensure that every participant have clear roles and responsibilities.
Elicit family priorities and basic needs.
Adjudicatory hearing determines...
A.) If the child can return home.
B.) If the parents are guilty of abuse.
C.) If the child has been abused, abandoned, or neglected.
D.) If the child needs placement.
Caregiver attitude about maltreatment is part of what domain?
Adult functioning.
Discipline/ behavior management.
General parenting.
Surrounding circumstances.
Which of these are part of the behavioral capacities?
Impulse control.
Take action.
History of protecting.
Setting aside own needs for the child.
Demonstrating adequate skills.
Adaptive as a parent.
Reaction to behavior.
Behavioral management.
The Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA) determines...
A.) Which state/county has jurisdiction.
B.) Allows jurisdiction to change automatically if the family moves.
C.) Jurisdiction on a case until the case is closed.
A and B.
If the child is UNSAFE you must...
Do a safety plan and leave the child home.
Remove the child.
Schedule an ESI staffing to transfer the case to CMO (Case Management Org).
Staff the case with Legal to help you write the shelter petition.
This is used to support the presence or absence of negative family conditions that have or have not crossed the impending danger threshhold.
Family Functioning Assessment.
Risk Assessment.
Present Danger Assessment.
Impending Danger Assessment.
Caregivers feelings and attitude around the maltreatment.
Surrounding/ Nature of Maltreatment.
Extent of Maltreatment.
Adult Functioning.
Parent Functioning.
The court relies upon the Judicial Review Social Summary Report to explain...
Information about a family that might serve as a potential placement option.
Placement recommendations made by the Department/Agency.
The degree of progress made towards the permanency goal.
The results of the Initial Child Safety Assessment.
CPI is expected to make diligent efforts to try to resolve any significant discrepancy of information that will have a bearing on assessment and intervention.
Reconciliation.
Reconditioning.
Reconstituting.
Resolving.
This refers to corroborating information from multiple reliable sources and personal observation.
Validation.
Valentation.
Valication.
Vertification.
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