Child Sexual Abuse Prevention Evaluation Tool for Organizations
Whether your organization is evaluating an existing policy or creating a new one, we’ve provided a convenient Child Sexual Abuse Prevention (CSA)…
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Home / Sustainability / Strategies for Implementing Systemic Change
Organizational changes are challenging enough, but the issue of child sexual abuse prevention and what you can do to better protect the children/youth in your care comes with extra challenges. This particular change forces everyone in your organization to consider the uncomfortable truth of child sexual abuse, and acknowledge the real possibility that the children you seek to support may also be exposed to risk through participation in your programs. The idea that “one of us” could sexually abuse a child is hard for many to accept.
Research from Industrial/Organizational psychologists suggests that true system change in an organization requires strategies and actions that impact the entire structure in positive ways, with outcomes that:
These elements, however, must be part of a process that brings the conversation between you, your managers and supervisors, and your staff and volunteers to a very different level than a set of mandates about new policies, procedures, programs, and timelines. Two important factors in this process are the strategy for change (the roadmap for defining and implementing the changes considered necessary for your organization’s growth or development) and the culture in which the change needs to occur (organizational mindset, history, decision-making style, behaviors, accountability structures, etc.).
Policies & Procedures
Whether your organization is evaluating an existing policy or creating a new one, we’ve provided a convenient Child Sexual Abuse Prevention (CSA)…
Code of Conduct
Along with guiding appropriate behavior, your Code of Conduct should include a clear description of the lines of communication and reporting…
Screening & Hiring
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 …
Code of Conduct
Your Code of Conduct will be unique to your organization, based on your size, purpose, location, staffing, ages served, additional vulnerabilities…
Reporting
All staff must be aware of the warning signs and symptoms of child abuse and neglect, know how to respond appropriately, and report suspected cases…
Monitoring Behavior
Monitoring and responding to inappropriate behavior is a part of the job of every individual involved in your organization. It means observing…
Safe Environments
How is Your Facility Designed to Keep Children Safe? Child development and school-age programs operate in many different types of facilities….
Sustainability
Change Can Be a Challenge “The best-laid plans of mice and men often go awry.” So said the famed poet Robert Burns after ploughing his fields…
Screening & Hiring
State and federal laws and regulations require specific types of screening and background checks—particularly criminal and sexual offense records…
Training
Strangers are not the main offenders when it comes to child sexual abuse. Children and youth are much more likely to be abused by people …
Customized child sexual abuse prevention guidelines to meet the unique needs of any organization that serves children.
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