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The Family Assessment Form

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The Family Assessment Form Agency/Program Name Date Agenda Welcome and Introductions FAF Overview Assessment Exercises Service Planning Exercises Training Evaluation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Family Assessment Form


1
The Family Assessment Form
  • Agency/Program Name
  • Date

2
Agenda
  • Welcome and Introductions
  • FAF Overview
  • Assessment Exercises
  • Service Planning Exercises
  • Training Evaluation

3
Introduction
  • Name
  • What is most rewarding to you about your job?

4
Objectives
  • To understand purpose of the FAF
  • To become familiar with FAF structure
  • To practice using the FAF

5
A Brief History
  • Developed between 1986-1990 at Childrens Bureau
    of Southern California, a non-profit agency
    providing child abuse treatment and prevention
    services.
  • Created by a team of staff home visitors,
    supervisor, developmental psychologist, and
    research consultants.
  • Developed as a home based instrument for use in
    family support/family preservation services and
    used by programs across the country
  • Used in several program evaluation studies and a
    major controlled research study in Los Angeles
    County.
  • Distributed by Child Welfare League of America
    beginning in 1997.
  • Software developed between 2000-2004.

6
Mini-Exercise
  • Divide into two groups.
  • Group One Make a list of your greatest
    challenges in working with families and in home
    visiting.
  • Group Two What kinds of information do you get
    from families to decide how you can help them?

7
FAF Purpose
  • Thorough Family Assessments
  • Focused Goals and Service Plans
  • Consistent and Efficient Documentation
  • Staff Orientation and Training
  • Program Evaluation

8
Thorough Family Assessment
  • Focus on family strengths
  • need structured way to emphasize strengths
  • Challenge of home visitation
  • multiple distractions and crises can interfere
    with understanding core issues
  • worker not in control of environment
  • family problems can be overwhelming
  • Importance of the Big Picture
  • need to understand family dynamics, short and
    long-term needs, stresses, etc.
  • good assessments take time time well spent

9
Focused Goals and Service Plans
  • Goals and service plans need to be family driven
    and linked to assessment
  • Cannot address everything need to be
    thoughtfully selective in engaging family in goal
    setting
  • Service plan needs to be realistic and unique to
    the family situation
  • Assessment informs HOW you work with a family as
    well as what you work on
  • unique family strengths and characteristics

10
Documentation
  • Consistency of documentation across workers,
    program sites, etc.
  • Short-hand method for home visitor
  • Easy to review by others (i.e. supervisor,
    back-up home visitor)
  • FAF takes a snapshot of the family
  • FAF takes the place of a written, narrative
    assessment

11
Staff Orientation and Training
  • FAF helps clarify expectations and scope of work
    for new staff
  • Points to areas of individual or team training
    needs
  • Helps structure individual supervision and case
    presentations
  • FAF is a tool to teach assessment and service
    planning
  • FAF provides objective language for report
    writing

12
Program Evaluation
  • Provides immediate feedback to worker and family
    on individual family change
  • Aggregate data can be used to report on program
    outcomes

13
Philosophical Approach
  • Practice First
  • first and foremost a practice tool that has to
    work for the home visitor
  • not designed to structure family sessions, rather
    to document differently what is learned about the
    family
  • need a disciplined way to see strengths in
    families with complex problems

14
Philosophical Approach
  • Ecological/Systems Theory
  • Problems are not within individuals rather in the
    fit between parts of the system
  • FAF addresses physical environment, social
    support, caregiver child interactions, caregiver
    functioning and child behavior
  • Intervention might be targeted at a misfit in
    the system
  • i.e., childs school problem may be related to
    parent/teacher communication
  • Change in one part of the system will change
    another part
  • i.e., improved parenting skills will improve
    child development

15
FAF Components
  • Case Log/Intake
  • Family Functioning Factors
  • Child Behavior Observation Checklist
  • Service Plan
  • Contacts
  • Closing Summary

16
Case Log/Intake
  • Case Name/Contact Information
  • Case Number
  • Worker Assigned
  • Family Composition and Demographics
  • History of Child Welfare System Involvement
  • Assessment Dates

17
Family Functioning Factors
  • Six Outcome Measures of Family Functioning - 39
    items total
  • A. Living Conditions - 6 items
  • B. Financial Conditions - 5 items
  • C. Supports to Caregivers - 6 items
  • D. Caregiver/Child Interactions - 12 items
  • E. Developmental Stimulation - 4 items
  • F. Caregiver Interactions - 6 items

18
Personal Characteristics/History
  • Two Adult Assessment Factors optional items,
    not used as outcome measures because not expected
    to change or could get worse (i.e., learn more
    about someones history)
  • G. Caregiver History - 8 items
  • H. Personal Characteristics - 12 items

19
Child Behavior Observation Checklist
  • Child Specific Categories - optional items not
    used for outcome measurement
  • I. Acting Out Behaviors - 7 items
  • J. Inner Directed Behaviors - 9 items
  • K. School Behaviors - 4 items
  • L. Health and Development - 7 items
  • M. Temperament - 4 items

20
Service Plan
  • Components
  • FAF items indicating strengths
  • FAF items of concern
  • Goals related to areas of concern
  • Tasks for addressing each goal
  • Frequency and duration of contact

21
Contacts
  • Date of Contact
  • Who Involved
  • Goal Addressed
  • What Interventions
  • Referrals
  • Progress/Homework Notes

22
Closing Summary
  • Result (i.e., completed, dropped, lost, child
    placed, etc.)
  • Outcome on Individual Family Goals
  • Outcome of Referrals
  • Summary Progress Notes
  • Case Statistics

23
  • BREAK

24
FAF Overview
  • Walk through FAF
  • Factors, items
  • Definitions
  • Scoring
  • Caregivers
  • Notes

25
How Do I Use the FAF?
  • Meaning of Scores
  • FAF Scoring
  • FAF as Initial Assessment
  • FAF at Termination of Services

26
Meaning of Scores
  • 1. Above average. Positive influences/traits that
    have a strengthening effect on the family and/or
    child.
  • 2. Generally Adequate. Minor problems within
    normal limits not necessarily nonexistent, but
    do not create problems for caregivers or
    children. Treatment or intervention not
    necessary, but may be desired by caregivers to
    improve parenting.
  • 3. Problems of a moderate nature. Negative impact
    on the welfare of children or put the family at
    risk. Counseling, intervention, or parent
    education are indicated.
  • 4. Problems of a major nature. Significant
    negative influence on children or caregivers
    well-being. Intervention required.
  • 5. Situation is endangering to childrens health,
    safety, and well-being. May call for removal of
    child intervention and monitoring required.

27
FAF Scoring
  • Each item is scored on a 1-5 scale
  • option to score 1.5, 2.5, etc.
  • Each item has an operational definition, based on
    the overall meaning of scores, to guide scoring
    selection
  • it is VERY important to follow the definitions
  • definitions are examples of the kinds of things
    you might see, hear, etc. use them as a guide
  • refer to overall meaning of scores to help with
    scoring decisions as needed

28
FAF as Initial Assessment
  • FAF serves as only form of assessment
    documentation
  • rule of thumb is to complete within 3-4 visits
    (6-8hrs) including service plan
  • score items following each visit with a family
    based on observations and discussions
  • in preparation for subsequent visits, review FAF
    areas not yet assessed
  • do not change scores following this established
    baseline period

29
FAF at Termination
  • Re-score FAF at termination of services prior to
    completing the closing summary
  • this should not require a special visit with the
    family as the worker already knows the family
    well
  • termination scoring should take about 1/2 hour

30
Key Points for Using FAF
  • FAF is a framework for approaching assessment NOT
    a structured interview or questionnaire
  • FAF documents, in a different way, information
    you already know about families
  • Obtain FAF information by observing and asking

31
Key Points for Using FAF
  • Use the operational definitions and overall
    meaning of scores to determine scores
  • this is key to maintaining inter-rater
    reliability
  • Brief narrative comments are essential
  • helps explain scores and uniqueness of each
    family
  • Tie family driven goals directly to assessed
    areas of strength and concern

32
Exercise 1 Section A
  • Divide into groups of two
  • Look at drawing
  • Make list of strengths and concerns observed
  • Complete FAF section A
  • Debrief

33
Exercise 2 Sections B, C, DE
  • Mock Interview
  • Divide group into small groups of 5-8
  • Each participant gets a Script and blank FAF
  • Participants take turns reading the two parts in
    the Script - worker and mother
  • Stop, discuss and rate the FAF as indicated on
    the Script
  • Debrief

34
  • LUNCH

35
Exercise 3 Sections BC
  • Role Play Sections BC Supports to Caregivers
  • Volunteer parent and home visitor
  • Review Sections BC items as group
  • Begin role play
  • Rotate home visitor role as needed
  • Discuss FAF item scores as a group

36
Goal Setting
  • What is a goal?
  • the end toward which an effort is directed -
    Websters New Collegiate Dictionary
  • a future state of being
  • what the family situation will look like when you
    have finished your work together
  • what will be different?
  • What are some examples from own life?

37
Goal Setting
  • What is an Objective?
  • Step taken by case manager or family to achieve a
    goal
  • A specific measurable action
  • What are some examples?

38
Objective Setting Guidelines
  • Specific and Clear
  • Measurable and Observable
  • Accomplishments - state positively
  • To practice active listening skills vs. to reduce
    level of arguing
  • To increase positive reinforcement vs. to reduce
    corporal punishment
  • Realistic based on resources - yours and the
    familys
  • Timeframe for achievement

39
Objective Statements
  • Objective statement format
  • WHO will do WHAT, HOW by WHEN
  • Father will enroll in vocational education
    program at Austin Community College by Sept 15th.

40
Sample Goals/Objectives
  • Concern Cleanliness/orderliness inside home
    (dirty dishes, trash overflowing, soiled diapers
    on floor)
  • Goal Parents will increase childrens health and
    safety
  • Objectives
  • Case Manager will teach parents about connection
    between health and hygiene by showing XYZ videos
    at next visit
  • Parents will make sure the dishes are washed on a
    daily basis and that the trash to taken out each
    week
  • Parents will child proof the home for their small
    children by Sept 15th, using the home safety
    checklist provided by the Home Educator

41
Sample Goals
  • Concern Appropriateness of discipline (only use
    corporal punishment with shoes and belt)
  • Goal Parents will teach their children how to
    behave using positive forms of discipline
  • Objectives
  • Parents will attend 4 parenting workshops on
    child behavior management beginning Nov 1 and
    ending Dec 1, 2006
  • Home Educator will coach and support parents in
    establishing child behavior rules and
    consequences by Dec 15, 2006

42
Sample Goals
  • Concern Bonding style to children (parent pushes
    baby away and believes he is crying intentionally
    to anger parent)
  • Goal Mother will increase her positive
    attachment to her new baby
  • Objectives
  • Home Educator will play the Happiest Baby on the
    Block video, demonstrate and practice calming
    techniques with Mother during next visit
  • Mother will identify all the things she likes
    that are special about her new baby by next home
    visit

43
Mini-Exercise
  • Is it a goal or objective quiz

44
Goal Setting
  • Who contributes to goal setting?
  • The family
  • Referral source
  • Case Manager using FAF assessment
  • Art is in blending these together into meaningful
    goals and tasks that the client is willing to
    work towards

45
Exercise 4 Service Planning
  • Divide into groups of three
  • One parent
  • One home visitor
  • One observer
  • Based on Section A drawing exercise, role play
    working with this family to develop a goal or
    goals and objectives around home safety and
    cleanliness
  • Debrief as group

46
Exercise 5 Service Planning
  • Divide into groups of five
  • Each group gets a sample completed FAF with
    ratings and comments
  • Assign each group a FAF section (i.e. group 1
    gets sections AB, group 2 gets C, group 3 gets
    D, etc.)
  • Each group identifies strengths in their section
  • Each group identifies concerns in their section
  • Each group develops at least one goal and
    objective for their section

47
Final Comments
  • Questions and Answers
  • Next Steps
  • Participant satisfaction/feedback surveys
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