COURSE DESCRIPTION
This course will look at the major historical, ideological, legal, and professional themes that inform child welfare policy. Issues including current legislation, history of child welfare, foster care, and adoption will be examined. In particular, we will focus on the social construction of mothering, of child neglect and of child abuse. Contemporary policies and programs for populations disproportionately engaged with child welfare services including Aboriginal children, immigrant and refugee children, and children of single parents will be examined. Students will be expected to engage in a process of integrating factors of gender, class, disability, race, culture and sexual orientation into their critical analysis of the ideological nature of Child Welfare.
LEARNING OUTCOMES
Upon successful completion of this course, students will have:
1) An understanding of the major historical, ideological, legal and professional themes that inform child welfare policy.
2) The ability to critically analyze current policy and practice issues in child welfare and their implications for social work practice.
3) The ability to articulate and integrate one”s personal and professional ethical perspective and its influence on social work practice in child welfare.
4) The ability to articulate the relationship of child protection, child welfare, structural realities, and the implications for practice.
5) An understanding of the role of the state in defining and influencing child welfare practices.
6) The ability to analyze social issues affecting children and families.
7) An understanding of racism, sexism, and heterosexism in child welfare services.
REQUIRED TEXTS
Kufeldt, K. & McKenzie, B. (Eds.) (2011) Child Welfare: Connecting Research, Policy, and Practice. (2nd Edition) Waterloo: Wilfred Laurier Press.
TOPIC: Single Parent fathers.
This paper is for my Child Welfare Course. I have already written the outline (proposal) for the major 10-12 page paper and I have been approved by my instructor to proceed with the major paper. I have attached the Outline as a guide for writing the major paper.
The Instructor has approved the Proposal and I can now go ahead and do the major paper which should be 10-12 pages and the Topic is: Single Parent fathers.
Length: 10-12 pages typed, double-spaced. APA format. References and title page on additional pages.
TOPIC: Single Parent fathers.
Purpose: This 10-12 page and double-spaced paper (reference list will be in addition to the Abstract, Title and Reference pages). It is a major research paper and it is an opportunity for you to:
In this paper you are required to explore critically and in more depth, a topic relevant to the policy and practice of child welfare (Single Parent Fathers). You are expected to develop your own ideas and understanding of a specific topic using course material and library research, as well as relevant practice experience.
The paper is intended to give you an opportunity to reflect on and challenge your current assumptions and philosophies about social work practice in child welfare, and to identify the major conceptual and theoretical ideas that support your approach to practice.
References: You should draw from between 12 and 15 good peer reviewed references for this major paper. The references must come from articles from journals, book chapters, books, reports, and articles from the class.
Reminder: use APA, 6th edition writing, formatting, and reference style, and the School of Social Work and Human Services APA Template.