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Children and Youth Services Review | 1985

Projects to prevent out-of-home placement

Theodore J. Stein

Seven projects designed to prevent out-of-home placement are reviewed. Three projects reported statistically significant differences in favor of experimental groups, while four reported a lack of success in achieving their main goal. Methodological limitations make comparisons of projects difficult. Nevertheless, the results of these investigations do not provide reason for optimism that preventive efforts will be markedly successful. The current emphasis on maintaining children in their own homes may help to explain some of the low placement rates achieved for experimental and control group children served by projects conducted in recent years.


Children and Youth Services Review | 1985

Permanency planning for children: The past and present

Theodore J. Stein; Eileen D. Gambrill

Abstract This article offers an overview of permanency planning, including the background out of which such planning emerged. Barriers to permanency planning as well as efforts to remove these are described, and current issues are discussed.


Archive | 1984

Implications of the Study

Theodore J. Stein; Tina L. Rzepnicki

In the introduction to this book we noted that the literature from the United States, Canada, and several Western European countries reflects a shared concern about children who reside in unplanned, substitute care arrangements and a growing recognition of the importance of making permanent plans for these children. Focusing attention on finding permanent homes for young people, many of whom experience multiple foster home placements during their tenure in the child welfare system, has been of the utmost importance. But, there is little disagreement that permanency planning must begin at intake. All decisions that are made from the point of entry into the child welfare system must address the question Will the option selected further or impede progress toward permanency goals? Despite its importance, the intake process has, in the main, been overlooked as professionals have struggled with developing and implementing procedures to ensure permanency for children already in out-of-home placement.


Children and Youth Services Review | 1985

Permanency Planning for Children in Foster Care: A Review of Projects

Tina L. Rzepnicki; Theodore J. Stein

Four major projects with the goal of moving children out of foster care and into permanent homes, as well as available follow-up data are reviewed. Three studies (Emlen, Lahti, Downs, McKay, & Downs, 1977; Jones, Neuman, & Shyne, 1976; Stein, Gambrill, & Wiltse, 1978) demonstrated that project services were effective in achieving permanent plans for children. Another study (Sherman, Neuman, & Shyne, 1973) showed no significant differences in outcomes. The contribution of these projects to child welfare policy and practices are discussed. Questions remain regarding the long-term effects of permanency planning and the degree to which the technology developed by the projects is being carried out. Controlled evaluations of training efforts and systematic monitoring of worker activity are necessary to (a) identify weaknesses in the permanency-planning technology, (b) improve implementation, and (c) design innovative approaches to address the changing population of children in care.


Children and Youth Services Review | 1985

Permanency planning for children: Obstacles and remedies

Eileen D. Gambrill; Theodore J. Stein

Abstract Recent changes in legislation and policy have removed some of the obstacles to use of permanency-planning procedures for children; nevertheless, many remain. These include personal obstacles, such as conceptions of and attitudes about permanency planning, lack of knowledge about human development and methods of change, and use of ineffective assessment and intervention methods, as well as environmental obstacles such as inappropriate incentive systems. Personal obstacles, for example, lack of effective skills, are directly related to environmental ones, such as lack of well designed educational opportunities.


Archive | 1984

A Model for Decision Making

Theodore J. Stein; Tina L. Rzepnicki

The model that we used to guide us in developing a framework for decision making is shown in figure 4–1.1 The environmental context in which decisions are made consists of three domains: the social, professional, and program environments. The social environment includes a system of values which is articulated in social policy and statutory law. Values are given expression by legislators when they fund social programs through which child welfare services are provided. Professional values are inextricably linked with social values, if not wholly synonymous with them. Social science knowledge and the technology derived from that knowledge guide professional practice by providing a means for achieving program goals. While separable for purposes of discussion, the variables within the social, professional, and programmatic domains interact with each other.


Children and Youth Services Review | 1985

Working with biological parents: Important procedural ingredients

Eileen D. Gambrill; Theodore J. Stein

Abstract Important procedural ingredients in working with biological parents are identified. These include: (a) pursuit of clientselected goals; (b) use of written service agreements; (c) confining attention to problems critically related to an overall goal; (d) identification of clear objectives; (e) use of effective social influence processes, such as offering timely service and encouraging positive expectations; (f) selection of sensitive, feasible, relevant assessment information; (g) use of effective intervention methods; and (h) arranging opportunities for feedback concerning progress. Objections to use of some of these components are identified and discussed.


Archive | 1984

The Outcomes of Decision Making

Theodore J. Stein; Tina L. Rzepnicki

The hypotheses that guided our work and questions that concerned us were reported in chapter 5. The extent to which our data support or refute these hypotheses are discussed below.


Archive | 1984

Description of the Illinois/West Virginia Project

Theodore J. Stein; Tina L. Rzepnicki

The Illinois/West Virginia Project was a three-year research and demonstration effort funded by the United States Children’s Bureau. Its main purpose was to develop and test procedures for decision making at child welfare intake.1 Intake was defined to include all transactions that occur between workers and clients from the point of initial contact through development of a service plan.2


Archive | 1984

Studies of Decision Making in Child Welfare and Sources of Information for Decision Making

Theodore J. Stein; Tina L. Rzepnicki

Of all of the tasks performed by child welfare workers, decision making is perhaps the most critical. Decisions made regarding the exact nature of family problems, whether problems identified can be resolved while children remain in their own homes, or whether to recommend out-of-home care should have profound consequences for the families served.

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