Five-Part Podcast Series: Advances in Supporting Kinship Caregivers

Record Description

The Child Welfare Information Gateway produced a five-part podcast series throughout 2022 that illustrated ways that states and tribal jurisdictions have supported kinship caregivers. The series includes interviews and group conversations intended to provide beneficial information for child welfare and social work professionals about implementing new services and programs, working across agencies, and improving practice. These podcasts highlight programs in Rhode Island (July 2022), Washington State (September 2022), the Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe (September 2022), Nevada (October 2022), and New Mexico (December 2022).

Record Type
Combined Date
2022-12-09T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2022-12-10
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Advances in Supporting Kinship Caregivers – Part 4

Record Description

The Child Welfare Information Gateway created a five-part podcast series that illustrated ways that states and tribal jurisdictions have supported kinship caregivers. Part 4 of this series explores the public-private partnership between FosterKinship and the state of Nevada. FosterKinship supports the state by providing both kinship navigator services and foster care licensing services, reducing the number of offices and agencies with which families have to interact to adapt and prepare for becoming a kinship family. FosterKinship also provides programs and services to connect kinship families with services or resources they need to raise healthy children. Topics discussed include:

• Kinship caregivers’ challenge to learn about and access available services and supports,
• The value of combining kinship navigator and foster care licensing services, and
• How reducing the number of points of contact for families helps create stronger, more trusting relationships with the child welfare system.

Record Type
Combined Date
2022-09-30T20:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2022-10-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Toolkit – African American Grandfamilies: Helping Children Thrive Through Connection to Family and Culture

Record Description

Both inside and outside the child welfare system, the probability that African American children will live in grandfamilies is more than double that of the overall population, with one in five African American children living in grandfamilies at some point during their childhood. This toolkit is designed to give resources and tips to child welfare agencies, other government agencies, and nonprofit organizations, so they can better serve all African American grandfamilies. It also explores some of the unique strengths and challenges of these grandfamilies, which agencies and organizations need to recognize to provide culturally appropriate supportive services.

Record Type
Combined Date
2022-10-31T20:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2022-11-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Tip Sheet – African American Grandfamilies: Helping Children Thrive through Connection to Family and Culture

Record Description

A disproportionate number of children in grandfamilies are African American. While African American children comprise 14 percent of all children in the United States, they make up over 25 percent of all children in grandfamilies and 23 percent of all children in foster care. The long history in the United States of enslavement, segregation, economic injustice, and institutional racism contributes to this overrepresentation in the foster care system, and likely also contributes to the larger percentage of African American children in informal grandfamilies. This tip sheet is designed as a quick reference tool for kinship care service providers and advocates, meant to help them design and provide culturally sensitive services to grandfamilies and kinship families who identify as “Black” and “African American.” It also serves as a guide for staff orientation/training to work in this community.

Record Type
Combined Date
2022-10-31T20:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2022-11-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Toolkit – Latino Grandfamilies: Helping Children Thrive Through Connection to Culture and Family

Record Description

Culturally appropriate services are needed to support Latino families as they navigate kinship care placements, which appeal to the family system fundamental to Latino culture. This toolkit fills a critical gap to help organizations and individuals across the country enhance their understanding and skills to help children and caregivers in grandfamilies thrive. The concrete tools include information on the diversity of Latinos and how to serve them with cultural competence that leverages their many strengths, the benefits and strengths of preserving and restoring cultural identity, as well as practice and policy recommendations for addressing systemic racism and biases that limit existing support to Latino grandfamilies and the children they raise.

Record Type
Combined Date
2022-10-31T20:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2022-11-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Tip Sheet – Latino Grandfamilies: Helping Latino Children Thrive through Connection to Culture and Family

Record Description

Latino children are much more likely than non-Latino white children to live in multigenerational households where three or more generations live, and where the grandparents or other kin may be providing a significant amount of caregiving. Multigenerational caregiving is one of the Latino community’s many cultural strengths. This tip sheet is designed as a quick reference tool for practitioners – including social workers, government and nonprofit workers, and community leaders working with grandfamilies and kinship families who identify as Latino, Latina, or Latinx – to help them provide services in a way that is culturally sensitive and effective. It also serves as a guide for staff orientation/training to work in this community.

Record Type
Combined Date
2022-10-31T20:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2022-11-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

2022 Regions 9 and 10 Virtual Tribal TANF and NEW Technical Assistance Meeting: Strengthening Partnerships Between Tribal TANF and Child Welfare

Record Description

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, Office of Family Assistance hosted the 2022 Regions IX and X Virtual Tribal TANF and NEW Technical Assistance Meeting on August 23-25, 2022. The Strengthening Partnerships Between Tribal TANF and Child Welfare session was targeted to Tribal TANF programs interested in coordinating programming with Child Welfare, specifically for tribes that did not have a Tribal TANF-Child Welfare (TTCW) grant. It was also applicable for participants that were considering applying for a TTCW grant in the future. Participants learned about resources available for increasing coordination, including the Resource Toolbox for Tribal TANF-Child Welfare Coordination Projects, the Continuous Quality Improvement framework, and the Collaboration Assessment Tool.

Record Type
Combined Date
2022-08-24T20:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2022-08-25
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)
PeerTA Resources (OFA Initiatives)

Motivational Interviewing: A Guide to Family First Implementation

Record Description

The Family First Prevention Services Act (Family First) authorized new federal Title IV-E funding for evidence-based programs (EBPs) that have been rated and approved by the Title IV-E Prevention Services Clearinghouse. One such EBP, Motivational Interviewing (MI), has the potential to change the way child welfare professionals work with and support families. MI creates affirming and transformative service experiences through which workers and clinicians have been trained to reach, engage, and empower families; MI represents an opportunity for agencies to deliver improved outcomes for children and families using a practice that is approved for federal funding under Family First. Available for downloading, the Motivational Interviewing Guide is designed to assist state and local Title IV-E agencies with implementing MI as a well-supported EBP in their Title IV-E Prevention Plans.

Record Type
Combined Date
2022-03-08T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2022-03-09
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Does the Safety Net Help Prevent Family and Youth Violence?

Record Description

Families experiencing poverty and economic pressure have increased risk for child maltreatment, intimate partner violence, and acts of violence by youth. This article highlights several programs that reduce rates of family and child poverty, including TANF, but it notes how TANF policies in particular have the greatest economic security policy discrepancies across states despite research that shows policies that increase access to money protect against family and youth violence. The article discusses research that indicates work requirements in TANF and other evidence-based interventions may protect against violence by increasing individual and family resources. However, one-size-fits-all work requirements may have unanticipated negative effects, such as an increase in sanctions that contribute to unemployment or under-employment when an individual cannot meet set requirements or leaving single mothers with less time to care for their children, which may increase the risk of child maltreatment.

Record Type
Combined Date
2022-02-28T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2022-03-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Family Engagement: Partnering With Families to Improve Child Welfare Outcomes

Record Description

This bulletin for child welfare professionals overviews the foundational elements of the family engagement approach and offers strategies and promising practices for implementing it. While the resource is intended to provide information for frontline caseworkers who directly engage families, it also provides information about family engagement at the system, program, and community levels, as best practices are grounded in these higher levels of the child welfare system.

Record Type
Combined Date
2021-06-30T20:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2021-07-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)