Recognizing Abuse & Neglect
Recognizing Abuse & Neglect The minimum required safety elements for you to prepare leadership, staff, and volunteers to recognize, respond…
Home / Screening & Hiring / Why Do You Need a Screening Process?
One way you can help prevent child sexual abuse within your organization is by screening out those at risk to cause harm—before they are hired or allowed to volunteer. The goal of your screening process should be to recruit and select skilled, qualified individuals for staff and volunteer positions, and to screen out individuals who have sexually abused children/youth, may be at risk to abuse, or may not be safe individuals.
The good news is that most organizations conduct some form of screening—and you may already have some screening and hiring processes in place. Our guidelines can help you ensure that you’re doing as much as possible to keep the children and youth in your care safe. This is especially important in situations where there is a potential for your staff and volunteers to have unmonitored access to minor children, including those who provide transportation to them.
Whether your organization is a large corporation with hundreds of employees, a program with few staff, or a small sole proprietorship, you can implement an effective screening program to protect children. Not every screening method we describe will necessarily apply to your program. Though some organizations have licensing or accreditation standards that outline specific screening requirements, many do not. You can use these as guidelines to help you adopt the best possible screening practices for your environment and risk level. What’s important is that you incorporate some level of applicant screening into your program and treat it as a mission-critical business practice and thoughtful management technique. Screening is not discretionary; it’s vital to a program like yours that serves children and youth.
Screening doesn’t refer to a single event or tool, but more to a process with multiple components—some that occur as you consider a potential applicant for employment or volunteer service, some that apply after an individual joins your organization, and some that can recur periodically during their employment or tenure. Your screening requirements must be outlined clearly and accurately in your policies and procedures. Keep in mind that the very existence of a screening policy can be a deterrent to individuals who would rather be employed or volunteer in an organization with weak or nonexistent screening practices, so that they can access and harm children and youth.
Reporting
Recognizing Abuse & Neglect The minimum required safety elements for you to prepare leadership, staff, and volunteers to recognize, respond…
Monitoring Behavior
Protocols should be developed in order to inform staff and volunteers about supervision, communication, and reporting procedures at your…
Screening & Hiring
By checking a candidate’s references, you can obtain additional information about applicants and help verify their previous work and volunteer…
Training
Ideally, all children/youth should receive training and education on issues of personal safety and abuse prevention. Personal safety and child…
Reporting
When a member of your staff suspects that a child is being abused and/or neglected, they are required to immediately call your local Department of…
Reporting
Visit the website, Massachusetts Department of Children & Families Locations to find contact information for your local office and see…
Monitoring Behavior
Your Youth-Serving Organization (YSO) should develop a protocol to keep staff and volunteers accountable for their behaviors. Identify the…
Reporting
Sometimes, a child/youth might self-disclose an abusive situation to an adult in your organization. These disclosures can be direct, where the child…
Code of Conduct
Once your Code of Conduct is in place, it’s important to implement it through training and by disseminating the information widely, in a variety…
Safe Environments
Safe Environment Strategies: Access Complementing the physical aspects of safety are the procedural aspects of safety and security, and how…
Customized child sexual abuse prevention guidelines to meet the unique needs of any organization that serves children.
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