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School System

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Social workers must cooperate with school personnel to achieve the goals ... School social workers must be conversant with affirmative reporting requirements. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: School System


1
School System
A social worker entering a school for the first
time may feel a bit like Alice as she tumbled
down the rabbit hole and landed in the long
corridor, finding it lined with locked doors.
2
  • School social workers practice in settings where
    the focus of service is on education rather than
    social work. Social workers must cooperate with
    school personnel to achieve the goals of
    education.

3
  • Dealing with transactions between individuals and
    environments is called Transactions Individuals
    Environment (TIE).
  • Surviving, affiliating, growing, and achieving
    form a continuum of coping.
  • These categories help us set priorities for
    practice intervention.

4
  • Surviving
  • Food, shelter, clothing, medical treatment,
    locomotion
  • Affiliating
  • Personal relationships
  • Ability to use organizations
  • Growing Achieving
  • cognitive capacities
  • physical capacities
  • economic capacities
  • emotional capacities

5
  • Resources- supplies that can be drawn on when
    needed or can turn to for support.
  • Families, neighbors, co-workers
  • Schools, hospitals,courts, police
  • Churches, agencies, organizations
  • Expectations- patterned performances and
    normative obligations that are grounded in
    established in societal structures.
  • Roles tasks
  • Laws policies- binding customs or rules of
    conduct
  • Rights, responsibilities, laws, policies,
    sanctions

6
Focus of School Social Work
7
Empowerment
  • The role of the social worker is not to change
    people, treat people, help people cope, or
    counsel people. The role is not to empower
    people. As Simon (1990) argued, social workers
    cannot empower others "more than a simple
    linguistic nuance, the notion that social workers
    do not empower others, but instead, help people
    empower themselves is an ontological distinction
    that frames the reality experienced by both
    workers and clients" (p. 32). To assume a social
    worker can empower someone else is naive and
    condescending and has little basis in reality.
    Power is not something that social workers
    possess for distribution at will. Clients, not
    social workers, own the power that brings
    significant change in clinical practice. A
    clinical social worker is merely a resource
    person with professional training on the use of
    resources who is committed to people empowerment
    and willing to share his or her knowledge in a
    manner that helps people realize their own power,
    take control of their own lives, and solve their
    own problems.
  • Charles Cowger, 1994

8
Systems Theory
Visibility- availability To whom is the social
worker important? In what ways is the social
worker significant? Viability- creativity The
social worker needs to be seen in ACTION. Value-
evaluation Evaluation of ones work
9
  • Direct services
  • Advocate for specific pupils, groups whose needs
    are unmet
  • Consultant to administrators in their task of
    program development and policy change
  • Consultant to teachers to enhance their ability
    to create a productive climate for maximum
    learning
  • Link to community services and facilitator
    between school community in obtaining services
    for pupils and their families
  • Assessor of needs of individual pupils and of the
    school system as related to program development

10
Ecological Perspective
Components of the Ecological System
The Ecological Environment
11
  • School social workers practice is not focused on
    individual problem pupils but on the range of
    social interplays that occur among systems within
    the school environment.
  • The students immediate ecological environment
    consists of Microsystems, such as family,
    classroom, neighborhood, playground. The
    Mesosystem comprises the interrelationship
    between two or more of the Microsystems.

12
  • Confidentiality
  • Standards of practice for school social workers
    require that "adequate safeguards for the privacy
    and confidentiality of information" be
    maintained. Confidentiality is an underlying
    principle of school social work and is essential
    to the establishment of an atmosphere of
    confidence and trust between the professionals
    and the individuals they serve.Information is
    communicated to school social workers by students
    and families with the expectation that these
    communications will remain confidential. An
    assurance of confidentiality promotes the free
    disclosure of information necessary for effective
    treatment

13
  • Most states recognize that communications between
    social worker and client are privileged however,
    this privilege is not absolute. School social
    workers as members of a team of professionals may
    be confronted with situations where disclosure of
    information is critical to providing assistance
    to the student and family. It is the school
    social workers obligation to obtain informed
    consent, i.e., explain the limitations on
    confidentiality to the student and family, prior
    to service delivery.

14
  • School social workers must be conversant with
    affirmative reporting requirements. All states
    now require school professionals to report
    suspected cases of child abuse and neglect.
    School social workers should be aware of school
    board policies and should ensure that such
    policies safeguard confidentiality of the
    reporting individual.
  • Therapists, including social workers, are under
    an affirmative duty to warn if there is a clear
    and present danger to the student or another
    identifiable individual. The social worker must
    warn any individual threatened by the student and
    must take steps to ensure the safety of a student
    who threatens suicide.

15
  • 210.110. As used in sections 210.109 to 210.165,
    and sections 210.180 to 210.183, the following
    terms mean
  • "Abuse", any physical injury, sexual abuse, or
    emotional abuse inflicted on a child other than
    by accidental means by those responsible for the
    child's care, custody, and control, except that
    discipline including spanking, administered in a
    reasonable manner, shall not be construed to be
    abuse.
  • (9) "Neglect", failure to provide, by those
    responsible for the care, custody, and control of
    the child, the proper or necessary support,
    education as required by law, nutrition or
    medical, surgical, or any other care necessary
    for the child's well-being
  • Whenever such person is required to report
    pursuant to sections 210.109 to 210.183 in an
    official capacity as a staff member of a medical
    institution, school facility, or other agency,
    whether public or private, the person in charge
    or a designated agent shall be notified
    immediately. The person in charge or a designated
    agent shall then become responsible for
    immediately making or causing such report to be
    made to the division. Nothing in this section,
    however, is meant to preclude any person from
    reporting abuse or neglect.

16
Do Missouri's LCSW's have Privileged
Communication?
  • Yes.  Missouri supports the legal definition of
    Privileged Communication between LCSW's and
    clients, except where there is a risk of public
    danger or a threat to the public good. 
    "Privileged Communication" is defined as the
    premise and understanding between a professional
    and client that the information revealed by the
    client will not be divulged to others without
    expressed permission.  Reference provision
    337.636 and 337.639 of the State Licensing
    Statute.

17
  • Missouri Revised Statutes
  • Chapter 337 Psychologists--Professional
    Counselors--Social Workers Section 337.686
    Confidentiality requirements, exceptions.
  • 337.686. Persons licensed pursuant to the
    provisions of sections 337.650 to 337.689 may not
    disclose any information acquired from persons
    consulting them in their professional capacity,
    or be compelled to disclose such information
    except
  • (1) With the written consent of the client, or in
    the case of the client's death or disability, the
    client's personal representative or other person
    authorized to sue, or the beneficiary of an
    insurance policy on the client's life, health or
    physical condition
  • (2) When such information pertains to a criminal
    act
  • (3) When the person is a child under the age of
    eighteen years and the information acquired by
    the licensee indicated that the child was the
    victim of a crime
  • (4) When the person waives the privilege by
    bringing charges against the licensee
  • (5) When the licensee is called upon to testify
    in any court or administrative hearings
    concerning matters of adoption, adult abuse,
    child abuse, child neglect, or other matters
    pertaining to the welfare of clients of the
    licensee or
  • (6) When the licensee is collaborating or
    consulting with professional colleagues or an
    administrative superior on behalf of the client.

18
Records
  • Education records are all records which contain
    information directly related to a student and
    which are maintained by the educational agency or
    institution. Parents have the right to inspect
    and review education records. Social workers
    personal notes kept for use by only those
    individuals are not considered education records
    and are confidential.
  • A social worker's clinical records can be
    his/her best defense in malpractice litigation or
    court. A typical court case relies on the content
    or lack of content in the record to determine if
    malpractice has occurred.

19
Accountability
  • By the 1990s, the goals and functions of record
    keeping have changed dramatically.  The audience
    for the clinical record is no longer the social
    worker, supervisor, and colleagues. The new
    "wider audience" (Kagle, 1993) includes
    third-party payers, clients themselves, their
    families, and the courts. Increasingly, the
    central  function of record keeping is monitoring
    and accountability. Accountability means that the
    record confirms that the social worker is
    providing the service claimed and that the
    service is done in a professional, competent
    manner.
  •  
  • Jay Callahan (1996). Documentation of Client
    Dangerousness in A Managed Care Environment,
  • Health Social Work, 21-3,202-207.

20
FERPA
  • FERPA was enacted by the United States Congress
    to guarantee the right of students and their
    parents access to academic records to review
    their educational records in a timely manner,
    make objections to the information contained
    therein, and obtain copies of said records at a
    reasonable cost.
  • It also guarantees the privacy of a student's
    records, ensuring that such information not be
    released to anyone other than the student,
    parents or other educational agency with a
    legitimate need for the information, such as a
    school in which a student is attempting to
    enroll.
  • In addition, student's records are to be made
    available to all school personnel with a
    legitimate need to know the-information contained
    therein. Those who have such a need and obtain
    such information are obligated to treat it in a
    confidential manner. This means that a student's
    current teachers, counselor and principal have
    the right to see a student's records and that
    they should share the contents of those records
    only with other staff members with a need for the
    information.

21
  • The following people may have access to student
    records under FERPA
  • Parents- if student is under 18 or claimed as a
    dependant. Students- if they are 18 or older.
  • School Personnel- ONLY if legitimate educational
    interest in viewing the records.
  • Transfer School Officials- only if parents are
    notified of transfer.
  • Authorized Persons- through written consent.
  • Persons Entitled to Disclosure through Court
    Order or Subpoena.
  • Appropriate Person in the Event of a Health or
    Safety Emergency.
  • Persons Listed as Emergency Contacts- Even if a
    parent lists someone as an "emergency contact",
    schools may not provide that person with
    information subject to FERPA unless the parent
    has signed a written authorization specifying the
    records may be disclosed.
  • Independent Sources of Information- If an
    independent source discloses information, the
    disclosure is not subject to FERPA.
  • Divorced or Separated Parents- Unless a valid
    court order is on record, both parties have
    access to the students records.

22
Places to Turn
  • http//www.sswam.org/
  • http//www.sswaa.org/
  • http//www.socialworkers.org/
  • http//www.dese.state.mo.us/
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