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Published byMeredith Briggs Modified over 9 years ago
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The New Mexico Experience Practice Model Peer Network Webinar September 10, 2012
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Background Information
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Children, Youth & Families Department, Protective Services Division is the federally designated child welfare agency Administration is centralized, with direct services offered through county offices located within five designated regions
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854.8 Positions Current vacancy rate approximately 17% Approximately 17,000 investigations annually Average caseload 16.1 children per caseworker As of July 2012: 1752 in out of home placement 122 children on trial home visits 51% have a reunification plan 39% have a plan of adoption Approximately 3% have PPLA plan
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Federal Consent Degree Structured Decision Making Concurrent Planning CFSR Round 1 Program Improvement Plan CFSR Round 2 Program Improvement Plan Safety Management Model
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Identify best practices Revise agency policy and procedures Modify systems, e.g., SACWIS, forms, etc. Provide training Conduct quality assurance Management Information reports Case review Provide more training Provide additional training
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Piñon Project Defines how we engage and work with children, youth, families, and stakeholders Focuses on the safety, permanency, and well- being of children and their families Underway since November 2009 Supported by the Mountains and Plains Child Welfare Implementation Center (MPCWIC).
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“Bottom Up” rather than “Top Down” approach Application of Implementation Research
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Practice, program and systems change through fully integrated use of: Implementation Stages Implementation Drivers Implementation Teams Improvement Cycles
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Major Implementation Initiatives occur in stages: Exploration Installation Initial Implementation Full Implementation Two to four years
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Different strategies for different challenges Technical Leadership Adaptive Leadership Change efforts “get stuck” because we are using technical approaches for adaptive issues
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Perspectives are aligned (views, values) Definition of the problem is clear Solution and implementation of the solution is clear Primary locus of responsibility for organizing the work is the leader
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Legitimate, yet competing perspectives emerge Definition of the problem is unclear Solution and implementation is unclear and requires learning Primary locus of responsibility is not the leader
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Your Current Reality Your Aspiration ADAPTIVE CHALLENGE Adaptive Leadership
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Continued with necessary technical solutions Develop practice standards Revise policies and procedures Modify quality assurance practices Communicate expectations Expanded agency capacity to do adaptive work National Resource Center for Organizational Improvement & Cambridge Leadership Associates
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Discovering the Adaptive Challenge Personalizing the Adaptive challenge Mapping the System Case Consultation Office Hours
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Series of planning sessions with NRCOI & CLA Two Day On-site training in January 2012 Involved staff from implementation sites Implement Office Hours in implementation sites Ongoing work by the staff on one of the four adaptive challenges Monthly meetings with office team and executive sponsors Design and implementation of a series of mini- experiments Scaling efforts
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Diagnostic efforts are critical Experiments don’t always succeed – but you learn from successes and failures Important to identify measurements Anticipate and acknowledge loss and the various ways it may be expressed Be clear about why participants are being asked to change or experience the loss
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Presenters: Annamarie Luna Program Deputy Director Protective Services Division Children, Youth & Families Department Annamaire.luna@state.nm.us Brenda Manus Practice Improvement Bureau Protective Services Division Children, Youth & Families Department Brenda.manus@state.nm.us
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