Assessment 3
Title: Assessment and Intervention Report
Type: Written Assignment
Learning Outcomes Assessed: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
Due Date: 29 Jan 18 17:00
Weight: 70%
Marked out of: 70
Length: 2,000 words
Task Description:
Students are required to prepare an Assessment and Intervention Report on one of the case scenarios provided below, which includes the following:
1. Identification of the harms or risks of harm being experienced; discuss the indicators of harm that support your analysis; provide a clear statement of your concerns for the client/s, supported by evidence (20 marks)
2. Link the above with discussion and analysis of relevant evidence, theory, research and literature. Your report must cover the relevant knowledge needed to understand and work with this situation (20 marks)
3. Provide a succinct safety assessment of the situation, which is then used to develop an intervention plan. This intervention must identify some key outcomes for the client family. Importantly, you need to consider interventions that have empirical support (i.e. research that demonstrates positive and helpful outcomes for clients). This means your proposed interventions should be clearly linked to your assessment and the needs of the client and the family. Include how you plan to monitor and assess outcomes of your intervention plan (20 marks)
4. Scholarship: use of relevant literature; structure, clear and logical argument; correct referencing and techniques (10 marks)
NOTE: All scenarios are fictional. Any similarity to any person, living or deceased, is coincidental.
- Elder abuse scenario; OR
- Domestic violence scenario; OR
- Child protection scenario
Elder Abuse Scenario
In the last month, 78 year old widow, Joycie Collins, has moved in with her 47 year old daughter, Meg Brown and her 18 year old grandson, Alex Brown. Joycie recently had a failed hip replacement operation and now suffers decreased mobility. She also suffers from back pain and requires daily medication. Her daughter Meg recently lost her job and has been unsuccessful at obtaining another. Meg is depressed and frustrated and often argues with her mother, with whom she has a history of conflict (Joycie did not approve of Meg’s husband, who recently left Meg). Of late the arguments between Meg and Joycie have contained a more physical component i.e. Meg will push or shove her mother. Because Joycie is rarely standing, these shoves have not resulted in serious injury.
Joycie has recently noticed that her bank account has fewer funds than she expected, and that her pain medication is disappearing. She fears Alex is taking her ATM card and withdrawing money for his own use, and may be taking her pain killers for his own recreational use. When she asks him about it he replies, “Don’t be so stupid, Nan, you must be losing your mind”. Meg is very protective of Alex and refuses to believe he would steal from Joycie.
Joycie has always been a very clean and tidy person and has always bathed every night. She needs assistance getting in and out of the bath but Meg will not help her every day. She tells her mother she is not dirty and only needs to bathe every second day. This creates considerable stress for Joycie.
Joycie has always been an active member of her church and has attended Mass each Sunday. Now that she is living with Meg, she is a half hour drive from her usual congregation. Meg has said she will take Joycie once per month, not once per week. Joycie is very upset about this arrangement.
Child Protection Scenario
Twenty-four year old Lizzie Smith is the mother of Jayden Smith, aged 4 years, Troy Smith, aged 2.5 years, and Shanaya Smith, aged 8 months. All the children have different fathers. All three relationships have ended due to domestic violence. Lizzie’s current partner, twenty-two year old Jason Maa, is currently in jail for drug related offences and breach of a DVO. It is expected he will be released in a few weeks.
Lizzie and the children currently reside in a Department of Housing townhouse. Neighbours are concerned about the number of loud parties at the residence, the unkempt state of the residence (the grass is not mowed, there is rubbish piled in the small yard and some broken windows), and noise from Lizzie’s constant yelling and swearing at the children. Comments such as “ F.. off, I hate you”, “ I wish you’d never been born” , are heard on a daily basis. The children are heard to cry and scream in response, and Jayden is heard saying similar comments to Shanaya.
The children are reportedly often left outside unsupervised. They appear dirty, underweight and inappropriately dressed for the weather (it is mid-winter and the children have no shoes and short sleeves). They seem to be wary of their mother and are described as “out of control”.
Lizzie has apparently said she needs help. She finds parenting on her own very difficult, but has left past relationships due to the risk of physical harm to the children. She herself was a child in-care and does not want her children brought up in foster care.
Domestic Violence Scenario
Thirty-two year old Jacinta Anderson has contacted DVConnect requesting advice. She is worried about her thirty-six year old partner, Rajid Kumar, and his increasingly erratic behaviour. They have been together for 5 years. Jacinta is not sure what to do. Jacinta is eight months pregnant. When she announced her pregnancy, Rajid asked if she was sure it was his baby, and accused her of sleeping around. He now insists on knowing where she is and has activated a GPS locater device on her mobile phone. Every night he insists on reading her text messages and emails (which are usually from her sister, Emily, aged 28 years, or her parents, Bob and Margaret Anderson aged in their late 50s).
On Saturday Rajid would not allow Jacinta to go out and get the groceries and would not allow her to take a phone call from her mother. He said it was better she rest, given the advanced state of her pregnancy. He has taken her bank key card from her, arguing he will now do all the banking. On Sunday night Jacinta cooked dinner, but had then found she had no rice to serve. Rajid was angry and hit Jacinta in the face. She says he has never hit her before, but “ he has only ever yelled at me, or punched the walls”. She has sustained a bruise to her cheek.
Rajid quickly apologised and says that he is under pressure at work. He fears losing his IT bank job due to downsizing and outsourcing overseas. According to family history, Rajid`s father Virat, was a violent husband and father, regularly punching both Rajid and his mother, and Rajid has said he does not want to be like him. Rajid has no contact with his father because of his past abuse, and no contact with his mother, who he describes in a derogative, dismissive way.
Rajid has been drinking heavily most nights and had "drunk a lot" on Sunday night. Jacinta has just taken paid parental leave from her job as a pastry chef.
Marking Criteria
Your intervention report will be assessed based on the following criteria.
Criteria
|
Marks
|
Identification of harms or risks of harm being experienced; discuss the indicators of harm that support your analysis; provide a clear statement of your concerns for the client/s, supported by evidence
|
20
|
Link the above (point 2) with discussion and analysis of relevant evidence, theory, research and literature. Your report must cover the relevant knowledge needed to understand and work with this situation
|
20
|
Provide a succinct safety assessment of the situation, which is then used to develop an intervention plan. This intervention plan must identify some keyoutcomes for the client family. Importantly, you need to consider interventions that have empirical support (i.e. research that demonstrates positive and helpful outcomes for clients). This means your proposed interventions should be clearly linked to your assessment and the needs of the client & their family. Include how you plan to monitor and assess outcomes of your intervention plan
|
20
|
Scholarship: use of relevant literature; is well-structured, clear and logical; correct referencing techniques.
|
10
|
Intervention report tip sheet
The following intervention report tip sheet provides further details on constructing your report:
A&I Report - Guidelines for writing (docx)
Marking Rubric
Your tutor will allocate marks to your report based on the following rubric:
Marking Rubric - Assessment & intervention report (doc)
Submission:
- Online students please use Turnitin to submit your intervention report. Email submitted reports will not be accepted.
- Use the DRAFT submission point to submit a draft, obtain a text matching report, revise your report and then submit again using the FINAL submission point.
- The following brief resources on Turn-It-In will assist you with completing the assignment and should be referred to
- using turnitin
- submitting your assignment
ASSESSMENT & INTERVENTION REPORT
GUIDELINES & TIP SHEET
Choose ONE of the case scenarios.
Prepare an Assessment and Intervention Report which includes the following:
- A genogram of the family (place at front of report)
- Identification of harms or risks of harm being experienced; discuss the indicators of harm that support your analysis; provide a clear statement of your concerns for the client/s, supported by evidence. (10 marks)
- Link the above (point 2) with discussion and analysis of relevant evidence, theory, research and literature. Your report must cover the relevant knowledge needed to understand and work with this situation. (15 marks)
- Provide a succinct safety assessment of the situation, which is then used to develop an intervention plan. This intervention plan must identify some key outcomes for the client family. Importantly, you need to consider interventions that have empirical support (i.e. research that demonstrates positive and helpful outcomes for clients). This means your proposed interventions should be clearly linked to your assessment and the needs of the client & their family. Include how you plan to monitor and assess outcomes of your intervention plan.(15 marks)
- Scholarship: use of relevant literature; is well-structured, clear and logical; correct referencing techniques. (5 marks)
WRITING GUIDELINES:
This is an academic report based on a fictional scenario. It can be done in an essay format, or a report format which has headings. Headings can be very helpful in structuring your report; it ensures that you cover all the material.
Make sure to balance your writing (and word count) according to the marks allocated to each section.
Cover Sheet, with your name, words count, and your choice of scenario (DV or EA or CP). 2000 words. (No 10% rule applies, so 2000 is the MAXIMUM); Style: 11 point text; Double-line spacing; APA referencing; use paragraphs; attach reference list at end;
DO NOT REPEAT THE CONTENTS OF THE SCENARIO IN YOUR ESSAY. Pretend that the reader is already very familiar with the details of the case. This means you won’t waste your word count repeating information from the case.
In keeping with the above point, in your opening paragraph (or Introduction) you can make a simple statement about your intention to examine a domestic violence case involving a couple who are expecting their first child. Keep it simple, so that the reader knows which case you are examining.
This task asks you to PROVIDE EVIDENCE from research and literature that supports your assessment and intervention planning. This means you need to have a critical and analytical discussion about the value and weight of the evidence. It means identifying the source of your knowledge. This ANALYTICAL DISCUSSION should be woven throughout your report, with appropriate APA referencing.
Read the Task Description above. Check the MARKING RUBIC. Check that you understand what each part is asking. Balance your research across assessment, and risk & protective factors, with research into appropriate intervention planning for this case.
Remember to focus on achieving OUTCOMES that are able to be measured by you and the family as meeting the safety and well-being needs of the children or adults who are the focus of your case.
Focus your attention on the key people in each scenario. Who is the major focus of your work? Who make up part of their support system and think about how to include them in assessment and intervention planning, BUT don’t forget who the major focus of your work is.
SUBMISSION: via Turnitin.
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