- 21/02/2013
- Posted by: essay
- Category: Free essays
WEEK 4.1. Parents have a legal duty to protect and provide for their minor children. The state becomes involved with a family after it receives a report of possible abuse or neglect. How does a social worker balance the issues of family preservation and children safety? What are the issues of those decisions and the choices? How is this situation resolved? Describe and discuss these issues.
The terms of a child abuse can be very controversial as every family has its own problems and misunderstanding and sometimes the child abuse might not be as ruinous and grave as it seems. Therefore, the main aim of every social worker dealing with families with such problems is to identify the essence of the problem and to try to solve it carefully and delicately. A family is a fragile world with its inner relations, which should be understood and taken into account while helping the family. In cases of emotional or neglect abuse when it does not concern beating and inappropriate sexual behavior, a social worker should gently research the matter of the cause and elaborate the possible variants of solution of the problem. For example, a child might be neglected because of the misunderstanding between the parents, their continuous quarrel grasps all their attention and the child is left to his own resources. Then the social worker should draw parents’ attention to the result of their conflict and make them realize the problem as parents often are not aware of the situation.
WEEK 4.2. Adoption is a process to create a safe, stable, and permanent home for children. Child development specialists such as Maslow and Erickson believe a secure and nurturing home is necessary for a child and their healthy development. What is the difference between an open adoption and a closed adoption? What are the benefits and difficulties with each? What are the impacts of open and closed adoptions to the client, the biological parents, and the adoptive parents? Which one would you recommend?
Both an open and a closed adoption have many challenges for the adoptive parents and the adopted child. On the one hand, in an open adoption the birth and the adoptive parents know each other and their open relations facilitate the further life of an adoptee. The child knows his origin and is protected against the sense of abandonment, and desire to search for biological parents. On the other hand, a child might be faced with the gossips and might struggle with the prejudice in his life. A closed adoption in its turn preserves the secret of adoption and protects the adoptive family from undesirable interference and manipulation from birth parents. However, it does not give full medical information about the child and provokes more feelings of guilt in biological parents and might cause many problems in further relations between the adoptive parents and the adopted child. Thus, though both kinds of adoption have their difficulties, it is better to choose the one that will ease the life of an adopted child. In my opinion, the open adoption will remove the unnecessary secrets that usually add to the misunderstanding in the family.
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