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STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING: Achieving Safety, Permanency & Well Being 1

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STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:. Achieving Safety, Permanency & Well Being. Our Topics Overview. How you and teaming fit for better DCFS outcomes Teaming and its benefits Healthy, successful teams Facilitation steps/skills in the planning process Strategies for successful teaming - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:Achieving Safety, Permanency & Well Being

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Page 2: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Our Topics OverviewHow you and teaming fit for better DCFS

outcomesTeaming and its benefits Healthy, successful teams Facilitation steps/skills in the planning

process Strategies for successful teaming Conflict management – skills & strategies

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Page 3: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Activity

BREAKING THE ICE

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Page 4: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

REFRESHERSSTRENGTH-BASED PRACTICES &

ENGAGEMENT

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Page 5: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Core Practice ModelSocial Work strategies required to identify unmet needs:

Basic knowledge, foundation of CPS, legal mandates

Teaming

Planning & Intervention

Tracking &Adapting

Engaging Strength/Needs

Practice&

Child Safety

Page 6: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Enhances our case management/social work skills

Helping families engage to motivate change Supports lasting change for families Moves us from:

Deficits Strengths

Problem Focused

Solution Focused

Why:Enhanced Strengths Based Practice

Page 7: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Strengths/Needs Matrix

Behaviors & Concerns Client Hunches CSW Hunches Needs Statement Desired Outcome Functional Strengths Services/Strategies

Page 8: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Needs and Need Statements Common Needs

Shelter & Food (Safety)Affiliation (Permanence)Nurturance (Well Being)

A need is often the source of symptom or behavioral expression

Tip: Positively reframing a problem helps one get at the need.

(Vincent, 2008)8

Page 9: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

IntroductionChildren entering the child welfare or

foster care system:

Likely to have elevated levels of stress; related to level and frequency of maltreatment or the child welfare investigation or potential placement outside the home.

Colleen Friend, PhD, LCSWDirector, CSULA Child Abuse & Family Violence Institute 9

Page 10: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Short Term Impact of Trauma May Include

Depression & anxiety (displayed as aggressive behavior and irritable mood)

Disassociation and hyper arousal that may interfere with schoolwork

Attention & memory issues Affect regulation issues Emotional difficulties, relational difficulties & risk-

taking

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Page 11: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Long Term Impact May Include:

Persistence of above short term difficulties

High risk for substance abuse

Cognitive issues due to biological development

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Page 12: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Recap What We Know from the ACE Study:

There is a relationship between childhood traumas and health/social problems in later life

Self Sufficiency is more challenging (Social & Emotional Well-being for Youth)

Challenges in school, fears of leaving the system, fear of leaving placements

Achieving permanency as they exit our system

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Page 13: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Are They Engaged?FROM ENGAGEMENT CLASS-Open-ended questions -“When” rather than “if” questions -Questions that begin with “how” -Strengths Chat -Miracle Questions -Ethnographic Interviewing -Recognizing Strengths -Past Success Questions -Scaling Questions -Exception-finding questions -Coping Questions -Reframing -Empathy -Partializing

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Page 14: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

WHY TEAMING?Benefits for You and Families

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Page 15: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

BENEFITS for FAMILIES

FAMILIES BENEFIT FROM ADDITIONAL SUPPORTS AND MORE COMPREHENSIVE APPROACHES

FAMILIES LEARN TO COORDINATE THEIR OWN TEAMS

FAMILIES HAVE MORE RESOURCES

FAMILIES EXPERIENCE GREATER SUCCESS AND LESS DEPENDENCE ON THE SYSTEM = Better Outcomes

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Page 16: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

BENEFITS for SOCIAL WORKERS CSWs GAIN MORE RESOURCES AND SUPPORTS

(MORE COMPREHENSIVE APPROACHES ARE MORE LIKELY TO MEET FAMILY NEEDS - TRAUMA INFORMED SERVICES)

CSWs HELP FAMILIES EXPERIENCE MORE SUCCESS

CSWs ADD TO THEIR CURRENT “BAG OF TOOLS”

STRATEGY TO HELP PEOPLE GET “UNSTUCK” CSWs GAIN JOB SKILLS FOR THE FUTURE

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Page 17: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

WHAT IS TEAMING?DCFS TEAMING EFFORTS

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Page 18: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

TEAMING DEFINITION

“TEAMS GATHER IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT STRENGTHS AND NEEDS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO THE OVERALL ASSESSMENT OF A FAMILY’S SITUATION. NETWORK MEMBERS CAN IDENTIFY THE RISK OF MALTREATMENT BEFORE IT OCCURS, RESPOND TO NEEDS OF SAFETY PROMPTLY, AND PROVIDE A RANGE OF SERVICES AND SUPPORTS FOR THE FAMILY.”

DCFS CORE PRACTICE MODEL

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Page 19: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

TEAMING DEFINITION - FOUNDATION

A GROUP OF PEOPLE, EACH WITH “EQUAL” VOICE, COMING TOGETHER TO WORK TOWARD A COMMON PURPOSE

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Page 20: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

TEAMING - WHAT IT ISN’T

TEAM = MAKING A PHONE CALLTEAM = SITTING AT A TABLE WITH

OTHER PEOPLE JUST “WATCHING”TEAM = TELLING PEOPLE WHAT TO DO

IN GROUPTEAM = WALKING INTO A ROOM WITH

THE DECISION ALREADY MADE

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Page 21: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

CURRENT FORMAL TEAMING EFFORTS

TDM/RMPWRAPAROUNDMCPCMATPPCT CONFERENCE

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Page 22: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

OUR EXPANDING TEAMING EFFORTSINFORMAL MEETINGSAS NEEDED (SHOULD HAPPEN

REGULARLY AND AS NEEDED)BUILT UPON OTHER AND/OR

ENHANCED BY OTHER TEAMSFAMILIES LEARN HOW TO

FACILITATE THEIR OWN TEAMS

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Page 23: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

TEAMING AT ITS BEST

OPTIMAL TEAM = All the “right people” are meeting, talking, planning together. Team members collectively function as a unified and consistent team planning services – addressing needs – and evaluating results. The family is fully involved. There is collaborative problem solving that optimally benefits the child and family.

23Adapted from QSR: Teamwork

Page 24: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

MINIMALLY ADEQUATE TEAMING

MINIMALLY ADEQUATE - POOR = The “right people” are not there or not participating. Important information about the family is missing. The group does not function in a consistent, collaborative manner. Decisions are really made by particular individuals and may not be appropriate to family-centered practice.

24Adapted from QSR: Teamwork

Page 25: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

TEAMING AT ITS BEST

RIGHT PEOPLE WORKING CONSISTENTLY,

COLLECTIVELY AND COLLABORATIVELY PLANNING/EVALUATING THE

APPROPRIATE SERVICES FOR THE CHILD & FAMILY

FAMILY IS FULLY INVOLVED AND BENEFITING

25Adapted from QSR: Teamwork

Page 26: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Present Casework Cycle & Responsibilities

Interaction with a family from Hotline to:› Emergency Response› Dependency Investigation › Intensive Services› Family Maintenance› Family Reunification› Adoption› Legal Guardianship

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Page 27: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

TEAMING AT EACH “LEVEL”

ER, DI, ISWContinuing

Services: FM/R, PPChoose a level.

What might a team look like at that level? (Who might be there?)

How might the team get pulled together?

Note on flip charts to report out when finished.

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Page 28: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

HEALTHY, SUCCESSFUL TEAMS

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Page 29: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

RESULTS

ACCOUNTABILITY

COMMITMENT

HEALTHY CONFLICT

TRUST Invulnerability

Artificial Harmony

Ambiguity

Low Standards

Status & Ego

Adapted from Lencioni, 2002

Healthy Team Functions

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Page 30: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Team adheres to practice model (structures, techniques,

procedures)

Team considers multiple alternatives before making decisions

Team helps all members feel their input is valued

TEAM CONDITIONS ASSOCIATED WITHSUCCESSFUL OUTCOMES – REMINDERS

Walker, et.al., 2003

Page 31: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Team builds agreement despite differing views

Team builds appreciation of strengths

Team planning reflects cultural competence

TEAM CONDITIONS ASSOCIATED WITHSUCCESSFUL OUTCOMES

Walker, et.al., 2003

Page 32: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Activity

APPRECIATIVE INQUIRY

1. Your Most Successful Team Moments: what was happening?

2. Think about – as a team member, what did you contribute to that team?

3. In hindsight, is there something you wish you would have done differently as a team member?

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Page 33: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Y O U AS A TEAM MEMBER

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Page 34: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Activity

“SHOUT OUT”

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Page 35: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

YOUR ROLEA DEVELOPMENTAL APPROACHNAVIGATING CPS EXPERT

(ACCOUNTABLE ALLY) & “NEUTRAL”TDM DISTINGUISHED FROM GENERAL

“FACILITATING”WRAPAROUND FACILITATOR

DISTINGUISHED FROM YOUR TEAM GUIDANCE AND COORDINATION

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Page 36: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

YOUR FACILITATION RESPONSIBILITIES

BUILDING THE TEAMGUIDING THE TEAM PROCESSHONORING THE FAMILY VOICEENSURING THAT STRENGTHS AND

NEEDS ARE ADDRESSEDREACHING CONSENSUS RESOLVING DIFFERENCES

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Vincent, Paul – Child Welfare Policy & Practice Group

Page 37: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

TEAMING SKILL SETSSKILLS FOR EFFECTIVE TEAMING

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Page 38: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

STEPS IN THE PLANNING PROCESS

Preparing

Forming/Engaging - Team

Facilitating

Plan Development

Tracking Progress

Sustaining Change

(Walker, 2004; The Child Welfare Policy and Practice Group, 2001)

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Page 39: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

SKILLS THROUGH EACH PHASE

oEstablishing trusting, helping relationshipoDemonstrate genuine interestoAcknowledge strengths & cultureoProvide overview of teamingoGain informationoDecide contact information & processoRight people at the table?

PREPARING

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Page 40: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

SKILLS THROUGH EACH PHASE

oAssemble groupoEngage teamoEstablish agenda and common purposeoDefine team guidelinesoDiscuss (gather) strengthsoGather input from all perspectives

FORMING/ENGAGING

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Page 41: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

SKILLS THROUGH EACH PHASE

oKeep team engagedoRole watchoGather input from all perspectivesoDefine team guidelinesoExplore hunches (no “assumptions”)oBrainstormoOrganize & synthesize perspectivesoDocument ideas and tasksoTrack follow through (QSR)

FACILITATING

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Page 42: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

SKILLS THROUGH EACH PHASE

oReview overall purposeoIdentify and address needsoPrioritizeoElicit and use strengthsoEstablish goals and strategiesoOrganize family-centered planoDocumentoReview for acknowledgment of family

culture, strengths - individualizedoUnderstand resourcesoCheck access to interventions

PLAN DEVELOPMENT

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Page 43: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

SKILLS THROUGH EACH PHASE

oShow families how to plan for themselves (ongoing from step one)

oAssist with follow throughoRevise plan as necessaryoDiscuss satisfaction w/relationships

with providersoOngoing assessmentoAlways check in with family about how

the plan is working

TRACKING PROGRESS

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Page 44: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

SKILLS THROUGH EACH PHASE

oIdentify steps that increase family engagement over time (ongoing)

oBuild on small stepsoCelebrate successoHelp reinforce family planning for

themselvesoView challenges as opportunities to

grow (SNP)

SUSTAINING CHANGE

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Page 45: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Activity

SKILL CHECKLIST

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Page 46: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

A JOURNEY THROUGH EACH PHASE

PREPARING

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Page 47: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Activity

VIDEO - USE SKILL CHECKLIST

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Page 48: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

TEAM IS MORE THAN “FAMILY” Potential Team Participants

Child or Youth Out-of-Home Caregiver TutorMother Social Worker P-3Father Guardian ad litem Permanency SpecialistSiblings School staff 7Support Staff (TAs)Extended Family Therapist CSAT MembersFriends Mentor ProvidersCBOs FBOs SA CounselorsWrap Links Family Preservation AttorneyProbation Neighbors Shared Interest People

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Page 49: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

A JOURNEY THROUGH EACH PHASE

FORMING/ENGAGING

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Page 50: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

A WORD ABOUT FORMING/ENGAGING TEAM

Keys to Team Engagement:

2. WIIFM

3. Emphasis on Expertise/ Contribution

1. Who does family need to help?

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Page 51: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

A WORD ABOUT FORMING/ENGAGING TEAM

Keys to Team Engagement:

5. Celebrate Successes

6. Value Perspective & Contribution

4. Small Steps – See Progress

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Page 52: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

A JOURNEY THROUGH EACH PHASE

& BEGINNING“FACILITATION”

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Page 53: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Activity

SKILLSALREADY

DEVELOPED

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Page 54: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Activity

TEAM ANALYSIS1. Familiarize yourself with Natalie

2. Use Worksheet to discuss: What would you do first?

How would you do it? What skills would you be using?

What might your next steps be?

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Page 55: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Activity ROLE PLAY- Part One

1. Choose roles – Facilitator, Recorder, Mom, Natalie.

2. Role play preparing Mom for the next team meeting.

Why a meeting might be a good idea? What might happen? Who she may want to invite?

Use skill list, focusing on bullets “provide detailed overview of teaming process-purpose. What can be expected? Next steps? Gain information re: possible team members.

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Page 56: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

Activity

ROLE PLAY – Part Two1. Choose additional roles for team members

2. Have another facilitator take a turn as appropriate

3. You now have an entire team

Engage and orient your team; use “Forming/Engaging” steps from your skill checklist

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Page 57: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

A JOURNEY THROUGH EACH PHASE

PLANDEVELOPMENT

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Page 58: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

INDIVIDUALIZED PLANNING STRATEGIES

BEGIN WITH FAMILY OBJECTIVE

IDENTIFY MOBILIZED STRENGTHS

EXPLORE “HUNCHES,” CLARIFY UNDERSTANDING WITH FAMILY

IDENTIFY AND ADDRESS NEEDS

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Page 59: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

INDIVIDUALIZED PLANNING STRATEGIES

PRIORITIZE

USING STRENGTHS IN ESTABLISHING GOALS AND STRATEGIES

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Page 60: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

INDIVIDUALIZED PLANNING - Strategies

THOSE ALL-IMPORTANT QUESTIONS

SOLUTION FOCUSED INTERVIEWING MOTIVATIONAL INTERVIEWING

TECHNIQUES COACHING TECHNIQUES

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If you do not know how to ask the right question, you discover nothing.

W. Edward Demming

Page 61: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

PROBLEM SOLVING & TIME MANAGEMENT

REMAIN SOLUTION – FOCUSEDBUILD TIME MANAGEMENT INTO

GUIDELINES/GROUND RULESADJUST FOR CULTURE (TIME/PLAN

FOCUS)

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Page 62: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

ASSISTING FAMILIES IN THEIR OWN PLANNING

MODELINGMENTORING/COACHING

THROUGHOUTADJUSTING FOR CULTURE

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Page 63: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

STRENGTH-BASED TEAMINGEND – DAY ONE

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Page 64: STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:

STRENGTH-BASED TEAMING:Achieving Safety, Permanency & Well Being

THANK YOU!

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