Scroll Top

Module 4: SPECIAL TOPIC AREA – Supporting Families Formed by Adoption

OBJECTIVES:
  • Children and youth who have been adopted are overrepresented in residential interventions. Children who have been adopted represent only 2% to 3% of the US population but comprise approximately 16.5% of the residential care population.
  • Residential leaders have experience working with diverse families with complex needs. However, it is important for them to consider families formed through adoption as a subgroup with unique needs and considerations, which warrant specific and sometimes different engagement strategies.
  • Families formed through adoption, foster care, and kinship have unique and diverse needs that need to be known and reflected by all disciplines of residential staff.

The Basics for Engaging Families Resources

BBI RESOURCES:

A Building Bridges Initiative Guide: Implementing Effective Short-Term Residential Interventions. (2017, July). Building Bridges Initiative.

Building Bridges Initiative Informational Document: Permanency Practices Collaboration Strategies for Child Welfare and Residential Programs. (2019, Fall). Building Bridges Initiative.

A Building Bridges Initiative Tip Sheet: Supporting Siblings When a Brother or Sister is Receiving Residential Interventions: Key Issues and Tips for Providers and Families. (2014). Building Bridges Initiative.

Building Bridges Self-Assessment Tool [Also Available in Spanish]. (2020, September). Building Bridges Initiative.

Engage Us: A Guide Written by Families for Residential Providers. (2012, April). Building Bridges Initiative.

Family Tip Sheet (Expanded Version): Tip Sheet for Families Considering a Residential Program: Information for Families and Caregivers. [Also available in Spanish.] (Not dated). Building Bridges Initiative.

Hust, J., Kuppinger, A. (2014). Moving toward family-driven care in residential. In G.M. Blau, B. Caldwell, & R.E. Lieberman (Eds.), Residential Interventions for Children, Adolescents, and Families: A Best Practice Guide (pp. 15–33). Routledge.

Kuppinger, A., Hust, J.A., Hunt, P. Mosby, P., Hammack, S., & Caldwell, B. (2020). Putting families first: Strategies to transform and advance family engagement and partnership. In B. Caldwell, R. Lieberman, J. LeBel, & G. M. Blau (Eds.), Transforming Residential Interventions: Practical Strategies and Future Directions (pp. 8–30). Routledge.

Sexton, T.L., Rios, O.G., Johnson, K.A., & Plante, B.R. (2014). Clinical strategies for engaging families. In G.M. Blau, B. Caldwell, & R.E. Lieberman (Eds.), Residential Interventions for Children, Adolescents, and Families: A Best Practice Guide (pp. 34–45). Routledge.

A Tip Sheet for Families Considering a Residential Program [Brief Version, also available in Spanish.] (Not dated). Building Bridges Initiative. https://www.buildingbridges4youth.org/sites/default/files/pdf/BB-Family-Tip-Sheet-brief.pdf

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:

Examples of Clinical Practice Models to Engage Families as cited by Kuppinger et al., 2020:

ACRC Redefining Residential Position Papers: Becoming Family-driven (2006)

https://togetherthevoice.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Paper-2.pdf