AN%20OVERVIEW%20OF%20THE%20CIRS%20AND%20CIRS-A%20EXAMS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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AN%20OVERVIEW%20OF%20THE%20CIRS%20AND%20CIRS-A%20EXAMS

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AN OVERVIEW OF THE CIRS AND CIRS-A EXAMS Presenters: Dr. John Thompson, District of Columbia Office on Aging and Faed Hendry, Findhelp Information Services, Toronto – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AN%20OVERVIEW%20OF%20THE%20CIRS%20AND%20CIRS-A%20EXAMS


1
AN OVERVIEW OF THE CIRS AND CIRS-A EXAMS
  • Presenters Dr. John Thompson, District of
    Columbia Office on Aging and Faed Hendry,
    Findhelp Information Services, Toronto
  • Moderator Clive Jones, AIRS

2
Webinar Objectives
  • To provide an overview of the AIRS Certification
    process and requirements
  • To discuss and review the critical areas of the
    exam
  • To identify key resources for Certification
    preparation and provide strategies for writing
    the exam
  • To review some sample questions

3
What is Certification?
  • The AIRS Certification Program awards
    professional credentials internationally to
    individual IR and IA practitioners. It is a
    recognition of demonstrated competencies in our
    field that include the knowledge, skills,
    attitudes and work-related behaviors needed to
    successfully execute our duties
  • The AIRS Certification Program is operated in
    alignment with the standards provided by the
    Institute for Credentialing Excellence

4
What is Certification?
  • Certification is available for three
    specializations within IR. Individuals who
    successfully pass the AIRS certification
    examination are awarded a certificate and lapel
    pin, and may use the following credentials after
    their names
  • CIRS Certification for IR Specialists
  • CIRS-A Certification for IR/A Specialists in
    Aging
  • CRS Certification for Resource Specialists

4
5
History of IR Certification
  • CIRS Debut in 1996
  • CRS Debut in 2000
  • The National Association of States United for
    Aging and Disabilities (NASUAD) in partnership
    with AIRS, developed CIRS-A which debuted in 2001
  • InformCanada partnered with AIRS to develop
    Canadian versions of the CIRS and CRS which
    debuted in 2003

5
6
AIRS Certification Holders
  • CIRS (2,036 holders)
  • Certification for Information and Referral
    Specialists
  • CIRS-A (1,589 holders)
  • Certification for Information and Referral
    Specialists in Aging
  • CRS (320 holders)
  • Certification for Resource Specialists

6
7
AIRS Certification Mission
  • The AIRS Certification Program, operating in
    accordance with national credentialing practices,
    measures and recognizes competence in the IR
    profession, improving the professionalism of the
    field and the quality of service provided to the
    public.

7
8
Benefits of Certification
  • For the individual
  • Professional recognition for what you do. It
    addresses the misconception that IR/IA people
    just answer phones
  • Provides a transferable qualification. Many job
    postings state a preference for applicants with
    AIRS certification. As a consequence, there is
    much more mobility of IR/IA staff
  • Some agencies provide a pay increase for
    Certified staff

8
9
Benefits of Certification
  • For the agency
  • Builds confidence among staff they believe more
    in their skills if they have been validated by an
    external body
  • Enhances agency quality assurance and consistency
    of service levels within your own program
  • Helps funders and other stakeholders understand
    and appreciate the professionalism involved in
    IR/IA
  • The process of studying forces people to
    understand the context in which they perform
    their job and the skills that they need in a more
    systematic way

9
10
Benefits of Certification
  • For the people we serve
  • Enhances agency quality assurance and consistency
    of service levels between different IR/IA
    services
  • Improves customer service. Staff are aware of the
    requirements for quality performance and are more
    ready and capable of meeting them

10
11
Exam Eligibility Requirements
  • To apply to take the exam, candidates must
    demonstrate eligibility based on IR and
    equivalent experience combined with educational
    background
  • IR practitioners are eligible for initial
    certification only if they are currently engaged
    in CIRS, CIRS-A or CRS work

11
12
Exam Eligibility Requirements
  • At least 1 year of employment in IR for
    applicants with a Bachelors or higher degree
  • 2 years of employment in IR for applicants with
    an Associates/Community College degree
  • 3 years of employment in IR for applicants with
    a High School diploma or GED
  • 5 years of IR employment with no educational
    qualifications

12
13
Acceptable Equivalent IR Experience
  • Client-focused position with IR function within
    human services
  • Examples social work, discharge planning,
    consumer credit counseling, community health
    nursing, independent living skills instruction
    and school counseling or employment in a
    homeless or domestic abuse shelter, food pantry,
    group home or other similar settings

13
14
Finding an Exam
  • Exam dates and locations are listed on the AIRS
    website
  • All applicants who have had their eligibility
    confirmed can attend any exam location site but
    must give 30 days notice
  • Bring your letter of conformation with you in
    addition to picture ID!

14
15
6 Areas of the CIRS Exam
  • Assessment Skills (40)
  • Identification of Resources (20)
  • Referrals (25)
  • Documentation (5)
  • Follow-up (5)
  • Ethics, Professional and Legal Issues (5)

15
16
7 Areas of the CIRS-A Exam
  • Welcome and Rapport (7)
  • Assessment Skills (33)
  • Identification of Resources and Preferences (15)
  • Information, Assistance, Referral and Advocacy
    (20)
  • Documentation (5)
  • Follow-up (10)
  • Ethics, Professional and Legal Issues (10)

16
17
Rapport/Assessment Skills
  • The information and referral process is a complex
    one, which involves dealing with people, their
    problems and the maze of community, government
    and social services. Rapport/assessment skills
    include the following
  • Building trust and rapport
  • Effective interviewing techniques
  • Active listening and effective communication
  • Call handling techniques
  • Responding to cultural/ethnic differences
  • Identifying crisis situations
  • Identifying needs

17
18
Identification of Resources
  • This area of the exam involves prioritizing needs
    and identifying appropriate available resources
    for the client. The safe and effective
    performance of this task includes knowledge of
  • Eligibility criteria for services
  • Resources available in the community
  • Techniques of accessing information about
    resources information retrieval

18
19
Referrals
  • This area of the exam involves identifying
    organizations that meet the assessed needs of the
    client
  • Providing information on resources to the client
  • Resource specific information (e.g., location,
    hours, limitations)
  • Obtaining client agreement on referrals
  • Provide coaching and resource-specific
    information to the client to maximize their
    effectiveness in obtaining assistance and
    services.
  • Advocate as necessary

19
20
Documentation
  • This area of the exam focuses on completing the
    record of the call or contact by documenting
    demographic information, outcomes (referrals/no
    referrals), client notes, follow-up notes, etc.
    The data collected should provide enough
    information about clients needs to identify the
    following
  • Service requests
  • Unmet needs
  • Trends in community service provision and/or gaps
    in service
  • Demographic data
  • Profiles of clients served (aggregate data only)

20
21
Follow-up
  • This involves contacting the client to determine
    emotional status, if the referrals have been
    used, the quality of information and referral
    services rendered, or if additional referrals or
    are needed
  • Techniques for establishing rapport (e.g.,
    empathy, sensitivity, compassionate contact,
    receptivity/leadership)
  • Communication and clarification techniques
  • Techniques for responding to clients emotional
    states (e.g., reassurance, empathy, support)

21
22
Ethical, Professional and Legal Issues
  • This area of the exam covers service provision
    that is consistent with the AIRS Information and
    Referral Bill of Rights
  • Certified Information and Referral Specialists
    adhere to the requirements of mandatory reporting
    laws (e.g., elder/child abuse, domestic violence,
    suicidal/homicidal ideation)

22
23
Key Resources for Certification Preparation
  • AIRS Standards for Professional Information
    Referral
  • Study Guide on NASUAD website for IA
    Specialists
  • The ABCs of IR (especially the first 8
    sections)
  • CIRS and CIRS-A Performance-Based Competencies
    for IR and IA Specialists
  • CIRS and CIRS-A Job Task Analysis
  • Online Training Essential Learning

23
24
How Exams are Created
  • AIRS Certification Commission members drawn
    from across IR and IA independent from AIRS
    Board
  • Exam creation begins with a Job Task Analysis
    and is then followed by several stages using
    different groups of subject matter experts
  • Entire process led of psychometrician and
    involves over 50 volunteers at the various
    stages. And then repeated about every 4 years

24
25
How Exams are Created
  • Once exams are in the field, question histories
    are examined in detail and any question that is
    displaying anomalous results is reviewed in
    detail and might be changed or replaced by a new
    question
  • The evaluations are also carefully examined. So
    it is important to complete those!

25
26
Tips for Writing Certification Exams
  • Simulate the Required Behavior Application of
    Knowledge
  • Spaced Practice It is better than cramming!
  • Dont Psych Yourself Out!
  • Pace Yourself (You have 72 seconds per question)

26
27
Tips for Writing Certification Exams
  • Read the Entire Question
  • What to do when you dont know the answer
  • Check the Time
  • Check your Answers
  • .. and remember to breathe!

27
28
Sample Question One
  • When inquirers lack focus during the assessment,
    it is 
  • (a)  the responsibility of the IR Specialist to
    ensure the conversation stays on track.
  • (b) only natural because inquirers can take as
    much time as they want to express themselves.
  • (c)  the responsibility of the inquirer to
    empower themselves.
  • (d) a signal that the Specialist needs to move on
    to the referral provision stage.
  •  

28
29
Sample Question Two
  • Which of the following is an example of system
    advocacy?
  • (a) A letter to a government office appealing
    a decision of a claim for disability benefits
  • (b) A letter to a newspaper describing the
    difficulties people have claiming disability
    benefits even when they are eligible
  • (c) A call to an agency that advocates for
    persons with disabilities on behalf of an
    inquirer needing additional assistance
  • (d) Advice to an inquirer with disabilities on
    how to draw attention to their situation

29
30
Sample Question Three
  • An accessible service refers to which of the
    following?
  • A service that has no eligibility criteria
  • A service without physical, cultural or financial
    barriers
  • A service that has no waiting lists
  • A service where no identification is required

30
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After the Exam
  • Exams are currently returned to the AIRS office
    to be marked through a Scantron system. Any exam
    which is just under the pass mark is hand-scored
    to make sure
  • Candidates are informed by letter
  • The process is Confidential. AIRS only responds
    to inquiries to say whether someone is or is
    not Certified. AIRS does not state whether
    anyone has not passed the exam

31
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After the Exam
  • Individual exam scores are not shared. However,
    candidates can, upon request, be given a
    breakdown of their results in the areas of the
    exam (for example, 60 in the Assessment area
    80 in the Follow-up area, etc.)
  • Note that AIRS will eventually be moving to a
    Computer-Based Testing (CBT) system

32
33
After the Exam
  • Once obtained, AIRS Certification lasts for 2
    years from the time you pass the examination
  • Every two years, you must apply for
    recertification
  • You do not need to retake the examination but you
    must submit an application that documents at
    least 10 hours of IR training over that two year
    period. (Note that this is 10 hours of training,
    NOT 10 hours of CEUs)

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Question and Answers
  • Thank you for being here!

34
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