Technical Assistance Partnership for Child and Family Mental Health

Technical Assistance Partnership for Child and Family Mental Health

A Family's Guide to the Child Welfare System


TO: Colleagues

FROM: Jan McCarthy, Anita Marshall, Barbara Huff, Julie Collins, Steve Hornberger, Chey Clifford Stoltenberg, Terry Cross, Elena Cohen

DATE: March 24, 2004

RE: Introducing A Family’s Guide to the Child Welfare System


We are pleased to share with you A Family’s Guide to the Child Welfare System, a comprehensive resource that answers many of the questions families face when they become involved with the child welfare system

Written in a simple, question and answer format and grounded in the experiences of families and child welfare professionals from across the country, A Family’s Guide is meant to be a tool to help families learn about:

  • experiences other families have had with the child welfare system
  • child welfare laws and policies that influence the actions and decisions of child welfare workers and courts
  • people families will meet, the service systems they work in, and their roles with families
  • ways to advocate for their family’s rights (their own and their children’s)
  • responsibilities of parents involved with the child welfare system, and
  • practical tips from other parents.

A Family’s Guide also can be used by the child welfare agencies to build positive relationships with families and increase family participation in service planning, as a tool in family support groups, and to train new workers and foster parents. A Family’s Guide provides information that will help other child and familyserving agencies understand how the child welfare system works. It can be a resource for family support organizations such as community centers, faith-based organizations, churches, and family advocacy groups. It also can be used to teach social work students about the child welfare system and family experiences. Readers are encouraged to use A Family’s Guide creatively and to adapt it to fit the unique characteristics of their own states, communities, and agencies.

A Family’s Guide was developed as a collaborative effort among Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development, American Institutes for Research, Federation of Families for Children’s Mental Health, Child Welfare League of America, and National Indian Child Welfare Association.

Download the Guide in PDF format (Adobe Acrobat Reader required)

Download the Spanish version in PDF format (Adobe Acrobat Reader required)

To order additional copies at $10/copy, contact:

National Technical Assistance Center for Children’s Mental Health
Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development
3307 M Street, NW, Suite 401
Washington, DC 20007
202-687-5000 voice
202-687-1954 fax
Attention: Mary Moreland
deaconm@georgetown.edu

OR

Technical Assistance Partnership for Child and Family Mental Health
American Institutes for Research
1000 Thomas Jefferson St., NW,
Washington, DC 20007
202-403-6827 voice
202-403-5007 fax
TAPPublications@air.org