The Field Center for Children’s Policy, Practice & Research The Children’s Hospital of , Lead Community Sponsor June 12-14, 2013 University of - Philadelphia

Opening Keynote Speaker Antwone Fisher

Space is limited ...register early! Featuring Compelling Plenary Panels, including: Early Registration Deadline: The Role, Responsibility, and Ethics Friday, April 26 of the Media in Reporting of Child Abuse Advance Registration Deadline: Friday, May 31 and Jerry Sandusky as an Agent of Social Change: Pennsylvania’s Efforts at Reform – A View From the Inside

REGISTER ONLINE AT www.onechildmanyhands.org

Child Welfare in the Age of Reform: Creating a New Normal One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare June 12-14, 2013

CONFERENCE PRESENTED BY

LEAD COMMUNITY SPONSOR

TABLE OF CONTENTS CO-SPONSORS Welcome Letter...... 1 Keynote Speakers...... 2 Conference at a Glance...... 4 Program Guide...... 5 Registration Form...... 9 Special Event...... 11 Workshop Tracks...... 13 Conference Faculty...... 14 Welcome to Historic Philadelphia...... 16 Vendor/Exhibitor Information...... 16 Hotel Accommodations...... 16 Contact Information...... 16 Continuing Education Credits...... 17 Conference Location & Parking...... 17 NASW PENNSYLVANIA CHAPTER Map...... 17

CONFERENCE ADVISORY COMMITTEE Gwen Bailey Regan Kelly Claire Rosenstein Youth Service, Inc. NorthEast Treatment Centers Delta Community Supports Frank Cervone Chris Kirchner Amy Corwin Sagen Support Center for Child Advocates Philadelphia Children’s Alliance Pennsylvania NASW Betsy Fiebach Pat Kosinski Phil Scribano Social Worker, Field Center Advisory Board Family Support Line Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Kathy Gomez Leslie Lieberman Jessica Shapiro Community Legal Services Multiplying Connections Philadelphia Department of Human Services Janis Goodman Bev Mackereth Hon. Flora Barth Wolf Social Worker, Field Center Advisory Board PA Department of Public Welfare Philadelphia Family Court (Ret.) Wendy Graham Laurie O’Connor Margaret Zukoski CASA of Philadelphia County Montgomery County Office of Children & Youth Pennsylvania Council of Children, Youth and Family Services Johanna Greeson Cheryl Pope University of Pennsylvania, Asociación Puertorriqueños en Marcha School of Social Policy & Practice REGISTER ONLINE AT WWW.ONECHILDMANYHANDS.ORG

WELCOME LETTER

Dear Colleagues, On behalf of the Field Center for Children’s Policy, Practice & Research’s multidisciplinary team, I am pleased to present our 2013 conference, One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare, being held for the first time at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine’s beautiful Smilow Center for Translational Research. Located on Penn’s medical campus and adjacent to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, we can think of no better setting to gather for three days of learning and collaboration. We look forward to you joining us as the Field Center celebrates its 10th anniversary, offering an outstanding program with not-to-be-missed speakers and presenters. This year’s theme is Child Welfare in the Age of Reform: Creating a New Normal, featuring four important keynote addresses. Opening the conference is acclaimed author and screenwriter Antwone Fisher, whose poignant autobiographical story was portrayed in a film starring Denzel Washington. We are honored to present a Luncheon Keynote Address by Representative Louise Williams Bishop, legislator, radio personality, minister, and sexual abuse victim. Dorothy Roberts will deliver the Field Center 10th Anniversary Keynote on Child Welfare and Social Justice: Beyond the New Normal. Closing the conference will be Lisa Nutter, First Lady of Philadelphia and President of Philadelphia Academies. Our diverse Plenary Panels each address a critical and controversial topic, and all promise to be engaging sessions. From The Role, Responsibility, and Ethics of the Media in Reporting of Child Abuse to the timely Jerry Sandusky as an Agent of Social Change: Pennsylvania’s Efforts at Reform – A View From the Inside, One Child, Many Hands is the only place where you will hear from those who are front and center in child welfare reform. With 36 different workshops, carefully selected to represent the very best work in the field, this year’s conference offers great opportunities for learning, networking, and being at the forefront of new and emerging work. Our popular networking luncheons are back! And we are delighted to offer the opportunity for you to relax with your colleagues and enjoy a very special chef’s tasting dinner at Iron Chef Jose Garces’ signature restaurant, Distrito, one of the many great dining opportunities Philadelphia has to offer. As we move into our second decade, the Field Center welcomes you to help create a “new normal.” Sincerely,

Debra Schilling Wolfe Executive Director Field Center for Children’s Policy, Practice & Research

CONFERENCE STAFF FIELD CENTER FACULTY DIRECTORS Debra Schilling Wolfe, MEd Cindy W. Christian, MD Kara Finck, Esq. Executive Director, The Field Center Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania School of Law Sarah Porter Perelman School of Medicine Conference Manager Cynthia Connolly PhD, RN, FAAN Richard J. Gelles, PhD Cindy Santos, MSW University of Pennsylvania Dean, University of Pennsylvania Program Manager, The Field Center School of Nursing School of Social Policy & Practice

PAGE 1 One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare June 12-14, 2013

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS OPENING KEYNOTE SPEAKER Antwone Fisher Antwone Fisher is an award-winning film and literary writer. Born in an Ohio prison to a teenage mother, Antwone became a ward of the state and was placed in foster care. He spent two years in a loving foster home, but was subsequently moved and suffered twelve years of abuse at the hands of his new foster family. Unable to locate a new placement for him, at age 14, Antwone was sent to a reform school in western Pennsylvania were he remained until he graduated high school at 17. Emancipated from foster care, he found himself in the world alone and homeless, living on the streets of Cleveland. Antwone set on a course of healing when he joined the U.S. Navy where he served his country for eleven years. After his honorable discharge from the military, Antwone became a Federal Correctional Officer with the Federal Bureau of Prisons and, after three years of service, he took a job at Sony Pictures Entertainment working as a Security Officer. It was at Sony Pictures that Antwone was referred to a free screenwriting course. Antwone has worked in Hollywood for 20 years as a writer and producer, with an impressive fourteen writing projects or assignments with major studios. Among those projects is the feature classic, Antwone Fisher, directed by and starring Oscar-winning actor Denzel Washington, written by Antwone and based on his own life. The film garnered numerous nominations and awards. Antwone received the renowned Humanitas Prize, the Screenwriter of the Year Award from the National Association of Theater Owners, and was listed in Variety’s “Fifty People to Watch.” Antwone’s first book,Finding Fish: a Memoir, about his inspiring story became a New York Times best seller. His collection of poetry, Who Will Cry For The Little Boy?, a national best seller, creatively disclosed the road from his tumultuous childhood to the man he is today. Antwone’s poetry is featured in Nikki Giovanni’s book for children, Hip Hop Speaks to Children. His third book, A Boy Should Know How To Tie A Tie And Other Lessons For Succeeding In Life, won the award for Outstanding Literary Work - Instructional from the 2011 NAACP Awards and is in its third printing. Antwone continues as a prolific writer with his stage project,Antwone Fisher: A Play. His most recent screenwriting project is Training Day 2. Antwone made his film directing debut with the award-winning short film,My Summer Friend, and produced, wrote, and directed the 2011 documentary, This Life of Mine. Antwone teaches in the UCLA Extension Writers Program, the country’s largest continuing education writing program. About how far he has come, Antwone states, “I think back on a childhood full of longing for belonging, and see my life now as what I have created out of my dreams. An image comes to mind of Mrs. Brown at the orphanage in Cleveland, me sitting at her side, telling her, ‘You’ll read about me someday.’ I was definitely dreaming then. With no evidence of that ever being possible, I clung to that preposterous vision and with the force of those dreams willed it and made it happen. Not because I needed to be famous, but because I needed a world that made me feel uninvited to be wrong, so I imagined myself free, I imagined myself loved, I imagined myself... as somebody.”

FIELD CENTER 10TH ANNIVERSARY KEYNOTE Dorothy Roberts, JD Dorothy Roberts, JD is the 14th Penn Integrates Knowledge Professor, George A. Weiss University Professor, and the inaugural Raymond Pace and Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander Professor of Civil Rights at the University of Pennsylvania, where she holds appointments in the Law School and Departments of Africana Studies and Sociology. An internationally recognized scholar, public intellectual, and social justice advocate, she has written and lectured extensively on the interplay of gender, race, and class in legal issues and has been a leader in transforming public thinking and policy on reproductive health, child welfare, and bioethics. Professor Roberts is the author of the award-winning books Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction, and the Meaning of Liberty and Shattered Bonds: The Color of Child Welfare, as well as co-editor of six books on constitutional law and gender. She has also published more than eighty articles and essays in books and scholarly journals, including the Harvard Law Review, Yale Law Journal, and Stanford Law Review. Her latest book is Fatal Invention: How Science, Politics, and Big Business Re-create Race in the Twenty-First Century. Professor Roberts has been a professor at Rutgers and Northwestern University, a visiting professor at Stanford and Fordham, and a fellow at Harvard University’s Program in Ethics and the Professions, Stanford’s Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity, and the Fulbright Program. Professor Roberts serves as chair of the board of directors of the Black Women’s Health Imperative, on the board of directors of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform, and on the advisory boards of the Center for Genetics and Society and Family Defense Center. She recently received awards from the National Science Foundation, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the 2010 Dorothy Ann and Clarence L. Ver Steeg Distinguished Research Fellowship.

PAGE 2 REGISTER ONLINE AT WWW.ONECHILDMANYHANDS.ORG

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS FEATURED LUNCHEON SPEAKER Rep. Louise Williams Bishop Pennsylvania State Representative Louise Williams Bishop has achieved an incredible degree of personal success in three separate, but related careers - radio, the ministry and politics. The theme that runs through all her work is her desire to bring inspiration and assistance to those people in need. Born in Georgia, she moved to Philadelphia as a young child. What was not known until recently, is that this most accomplished woman’s childhood included sexual abuse at the hands of her uncle. A graduate of West Philadelphia High School, Representative Bishop earned a degree in communications and radio broadcasting and began her communications career at WHAT radio as the youngest voice in radio. Moving to WDAS-AM, she hosted “The Louise Bishop Program” for over 49 years. Her program was consistently one of the highest rated programs at the station and was an institution in the Philadelphia media market. She used this forum to inform and unite people around social, civic and religious issues, advocate for services for the poor, and bring the message of political leaders to the people. In 1978 she was called to the ministry and became an ordained Evangelist by the Pennsylvania Baptist Association. Representative Bishop felt God moving her to minister more than just between records on her gospel program. Today, she preaches all over the Philadelphia and can be heard on WURD Radio 900. In 1987, a blind man whose wife had deserted him and their five young children called into her gospel program begging for help. She asked the people of Philadelphia to respond. The power of that response led to the beginning of her third career. Representative Bishop was first elected to serve in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 1988 and has been overwhelmingly re-elected to office nine times. She is the House Democratic Chair of the Children and Youth Committee and the most senior African-American woman serving in the General Assembly. Representative Bishop has sponsored legislation to address a number of critical issues, including domestic violence, day care, drug treatment, education, and health care. She is most proud of the legislation that improves the quality of life for children and older people. Representative Bishop has received numerous awards, including the Woman of the Year Award from Operation Push by Rev. Jessie Jackson. Inspired by the disclosures of Jerry Sandusky’s victims, at the age of 78, Representative Bishop spontaneously disclosed her own painful history of sexual abuse for the very first time at a press conference at the State Capitol. This poignant and powerful moment has served to define God’s purpose for her work, and Representative Louise Bishop is committed to continuing to advocate for victims of sexual abuse.

CLOSING KEYNOTE SPEAKER Lisa Nutter Lisa Johnson Nutter, First Lady of Philadelphia, is President of Philadelphia Academies, Inc., a non-profit youth development organization that works in Philadelphia’s public high schools to provide career-based learning experiences that motivate young people to stay engaged in school and that create supportive networks for them in the real world. The overarching goal is to expand life and economic options for these students and set them on a positive path. Ms. Nutter previously served as Senior Director of Research and Planning at Philadelphia Academies, during which time which she oversaw and conducted research and planning activities for the organization as well as led the development of the organization’s research and advocacy capacity. Ms. Nutter’s diverse professional background includes work in the fields of education, community organizing, human services, community development, and arts and culture. Prior to joining Philadelphia Academies, Inc., she was a senior project director at OMG Center for Collaborative Learning with an extensive background consulting with community-based and non-profit organizations. While at OMG Center, she led several long-term research and evaluation projects including the evaluation of three multi-year community revitalization initiatives – the Annie E. Casey Foundation’s Rebuilding Communities Initiative, the Comprehensive Community Revitalization Project in the South Bronx and the Fannie Mae Sustained Excellence Awards Program. Ms. Nutter also conducted numerous public policy research and applied research studies in urban open space and open space maintenance, education and education reform, and employment and workforce development. These experiences with practitioners and organizations in a number of community change initiatives influenced her practice significantly, leading to her to develop practical organizational strengthening tools that are used to support organizational learning and reinforce reflection, self-assessment and planning practices among non-profit organizations working toward social change. Ms. Nutter has a B.S. in Psychology from the Pennsylvania State University and an M.A. in City Planning from the University of Pennsylvania. In 2005, she completed a year-long fellowship in the Emerging Leaders Programme which is administered by the Centre for Leadership and Public Values at the University of Cape Town (South Africa) and Duke University. She is actively engaged locally and nationally in issues related to social change and youth development and presently serves on the board of directors of the Women’s Community Revitalization Project, Big Picture Philadelphia. She also serves on the Advisory Council for the Pennsylvania Conference for Women.

PAGE 3 One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare June 12-14, 2013

CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12 8:00 am – 9:00 am Registration/ Continental Breakfast/View Exhibits 9:00 am – 10:30 am Welcome Opening Keynote Address: Antwone Fisher 10:30 am – 10:50 am Coffee Break/View Exhibits/Book Signing 11:00 am – 12:30 pm Workshop Session A 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm Lunch on your own 2:00 pm – 3:15 pm Plenary Panel I The Role, Responsibility, and Ethics of the Media in Reporting of Child Abuse 3:15 pm – 3:30 pm Break/View Exhibits 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm Workshop Session B Evening Tour Philadelphia on your own!

THURSDAY, JUNE 13 8:00 am – 8:30 am Continental Breakfast/View Exhibits 8:30 am – 9:15 am Field Center 10th Anniversary Keynote Address: Child Welfare and Social Justice: Beyond the New Normal Dorothy Roberts, JD 9:15 am – 10:45 am Workshop Session C 10:45 am – 11:00 am Coffee Break/View Exhibits 11:00 am – 12:15 pm Plenary Panel II Tracking Child Abuse & Neglect: The Role of Multiple Data Sources in Improving Child Safety 12:15 pm – 1:45 pm Networking Luncheon Keynote Speaker: Hon. Louise Williams Bishop 1:45 pm – 3:15 pm Workshop Session D 3:15 pm – 3:30 pm Break/View Exhibits 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm Plenary Panel III Jerry Sandusky as an Agent of Social Change: Pennsylvania’s Efforts at Reform – A View From the Inside 6:00 pm Optional Special Event: Dinner at Iron Chef Jose Garces’ signature restaurant, Distrito

FRIDAY, JUNE 14 8:00 am – 8:30 am Continental Breakfast/View Exhibits 8:30 am – 10:00 am Workshop Session E 10:00 am – 10:15 am Coffee Break/View Exhibits 10:15 am – 11:15 am Plenary Panel IV Sponsored by Philadelphia Children’s Alliance Structuring Child Advocacy Centers to Meet Community Needs: A Comparison of Three Solutions 11:30 am – 1:00 pm Workshop Session F 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm Networking Luncheon Closing Keynote Address: Lisa Nutter

PAGE 4 REGISTER ONLINE AT WWW.ONECHILDMANYHANDS.ORG

PROGRAM GUIDE WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12

8:00 am – 9:00 am Registration/Continental Breakfast/View Exhibits 9:00 am – 10:30 am Welcome Opening Keynote Address: Antwone Fisher 10:30 am – 10:50 am Coffee Break/View Exhibits/Book Signing 11:00 am – 12:30 pm Workshop Session A A-1 When Children Die From Abuse and Neglect: Working Together to Understand and Prevent These Tragedies This workshop is designed to promote engagement of multidisciplinary team staff, prevention workers, and staff in the child death review process. Kimberly Day, MSW, Deputy Director, National Children’s Alliance, Washington, DC Teri Covington, MPH, Executive Director, National Center for the Review and Prevention of Child Deaths, Washington, DC A-2 Fostering Healthy Futures: A New Evidence-Based Preventive Intervention for Children in Out-of-Home Care This presentation will describe the development and outcomes of the “Fostering Healthy Futures” program, a preventive intervention for preadolescent children in foster care. Heather Taussig, PhD, Associate Professor, Kempe Center, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO A-3 Clinical and Systemic Change for Vulnerable Infants and Toddlers in the Bronx The Infant-Parent Court Project of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine is an innovative program that works to create clinical and systemic change for young children in the child welfare system. Miriam Alkon, PsyD, Psychologist, Infant-Parent Court-Affiliated Intervention Project, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY Hazel Guzman, MA, Child Development Specialist, Infant-Parent Court-Affiliated Intervention Project, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY A-4 A Prosecutor’s Perspective: The Impact of Child Interviewing in the Successful Prosecution of Child Abuse Learn how interviewing can impact a child’s ability to recount past trauma and the prosecution of child abuse in a discussion of legal issues that includes “taint” and child hearsay. Risa Vetri Ferman, Esq., District Attorney, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania A-5 A Study of Maltreated Children and Their Families in Juvenile Court This presentation will summarize a study where juvenile court documents related to child maltreatment cases were coded to assess the system’s responsiveness to children’s needs. Canan Karatekin, PhD, Associate Professor, Institute of Child Development, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN Jamie Lawler, MA, Graduate Student, Institute of Child Development, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN Richard Gehrman, MBA, Executive Director, Safe Passage for Children, St. Paul, MN A-6 Medical Traumatic Stress: Trauma-Informed Practice for Child Welfare and Legal Professionals This workshop explores medical trauma among children in foster care, highlights practice and legal advocacy strategies, and provides resources for professionals, caregivers and youth. Judith A. Silver, PhD, Director of Child Welfare & Juvenile Justice Initiatives, Center for Pediatric Traumatic Stress, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA Steven F. Grilli, ACSW, LSW, Senior Clinical Research Assistant, Center for Pediatric Traumatic Stress, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA Jessica Feierman, Esq., Supervising Attorney, Juvenile Law Center, Philadelphia, PA 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm Lunch on your own 2:00 pm – 3:15 pm Plenary Panel I The Role, Responsibility, and Ethics of the Media in Reporting of Child Abuse Panelists: Jack Kresnak, Former Reporter, Detroit Free Press Kristen Lombardi, Investigative Reporter, The Center for Public Integrity, and former Staff Writer, The Boston Phoenix Kelly McBride, Senior Faculty, Ethics, Reporting and Writing, The Poynter Institute Mike Feeley, Director of Content, Pennlive.com/The Patriot-News Moderator: Dan Romer, PhD, Director, Adolescent Communication Institute, Annenberg Public Policy Center, University of Pennsylvania

PAGE 5 One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare June 12-14, 2013

PROGRAM GUIDE Wednesday, June 12 (continued) 3:15 pm – 3:30 pm Break/View Exhibits 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm Workshop Session B B-1 Utilizing the “Extreme Recruitment” and “30 Days to Family” Program Philosophies to Find Homes “Extreme Recruitment” and “30 Days to Family” have both been successfully pioneered by the Foster & Adoptive Care Coalition. This session will show how replication can work anywhere. Gayle Flavin, MSW, Director of Training & Implementation, Extreme Recruitment, Foster & Adoptive Care Coalition, St. Louis, MO Melanie Ohmes, JD, Director of 30 Days to Family, Foster & Adoptive Care Coalition, St. Louis, MO B-2 The Family Care Curriculum: Promoting Positive Parent-Child Relationships in the Context of Homelessness Presenters will share fidelity and preliminary outcome data for the Family Care Curriculum (FCC). FCC is a revolutionary train-the-trainer parenting intervention targeting mothers experiencing homelessness. Sandy Sheller, MA, ATR-BC, LPC, Clinical Director of Independent Projects, Assistant Clinical Professor, The Salvation Army, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA Karen Hudson, MSW, LSW, Program Leader, Homeless Health Initiative, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA Staci Perlman, MSW, PhD, Assistant Professor, Kutztown University, Kutztown, PA B-3 CPS and Child Exposure to Domestic Violence: Rethinking the Child Welfare Response This presentation will explore the handling of domestic violence cases in the child welfare system. Differential response strategies and best practices will be highlighted. Jennifer Lawson, MSSW, PhD Candidate, University of California – Berkeley, Oakland, CA

B-4 Forging Medical-Legal Partnerships for Children Medical-Legal Partnerships address the socio-legal determinants of health and improve health outcomes for vulnerable people through direct legal assistance, healthcare delivery enhancement, and policy change. Maggie Eisen, MSS, MLSP, Stoneleigh Fellow, The Health Federation of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA Shloka Joshi, JD, Public Health Fellow, HELP:MLP, Community Hospital, Chester, PA

B-5 Disproportionate Minority Representation Throughout the Child Welfare System in Suffolk County, NY Racial disproportionality is examined across critical decision points (report, indication, removal from home) in the Child Protective Services system in Suffolk County, New York from 2006 to 2010. Jesse L. Wilkinson, MA, Doctoral Candidate, Stony Brook University, Port Jefferson Station, NY Amy Smith-Slep, PhD, Professor, New York University, New York, NY Rick Heyman, PhD, Professor, New York University, New York, NY

B-6 A Multi-Pronged Collaboration Between Child Welfare and an Urban Elementary School to Address Truancy This presentation describes a multi-pronged collaboration among different school, district, and child welfare stakeholders to address and evaluate truancy in an urban elementary school. Roger D. Phillips, PhD, Developmental Psychologist and Evaluation Consultant, Lehigh County Office of Children & Youth Services, Alburtis, PA Alicen Bailey-Silfies, BA,Home & School Visitor, Allentown School District, Allentown, PA Melissa Boandi, MEd, Counselor, Mosser Elementary School, Allentown, PA Daniel Brown, BA, Outreach Worker, Allentown School District, Allentown, PA Kim Zsitek-Brannan, RN, CSN, MSN, CRPN, Nurse, Mosser Elementary School, Allentown, PA Stephanie E. Petner, MPA, Truancy Intervention Coordinator, Mosser Village Family Center, Allentown, PA Michael Jernegan, BA, MSW Candidate, Widener University, Center for Social Work Education, Chester, PA Daniel Basch, BA Candidate, Muhlenberg College, Psychology Department, Allentown, PA OPTIONAL ACTIVITY Wednesday Night at the Museum (on your own)

PENN MUSEUM PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART The Penn Museum, within walking distance of the conference, Visit the world renowned Philadelphia Museum of Art with is open until 8:00 pm. Enjoy their special exhibits on In ‘pay what you want’ admission from 5:00 pm - 8:45 pm. the Artifact Lab: Conserving Egyptian Mummies and Human Evolution: The First 200 Million Years. The museum is home to more than 227,00 pieces of art and more than 200 galleries. While visiting, make sure to run up As an added bonus participate in Quizzo Night. Join your the ‘Rocky Stairs!’ colleagues and test your trivia knowledge as you enjoy a glass of wine! The Philadelphia Museum of Art is located a short distance from the conference site at 2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway. The Penn Museum is located at 3260 South Street (see map For more information about the museum visit their website on page 17). Visit the museum website at at www.philamuseum.org. www.pennmuseum.org. Museum admission is $12. PAGE 6 REGISTER ONLINE AT WWW.ONECHILDMANYHANDS.ORG

PROGRAM GUIDE THURSDAY, JUNE 13

8:00 am – 8:30 am Continental Breakfast/View Exhibits 8:30 am – 9:15 am Field Center 10th Anniversary Keynote Address: Child Welfare and Social Justice: Beyond the New Normal Dorothy Roberts 9:15 am – 10:45 am Workshop Session C C-1 Recent Trends in Differential Response A discussion of the latest trends in Differential Response (responding proportionately to maltreatment severity and family needs) in child welfare jurisdictions throughout the United States. Kai Guterman, MA, MPP, Knowledge Management Advisor, Casey Family Programs, Seattle, WA Alan Puckett, PhD, MSSW, Knowledge Management Advisory, Casey Family Programs, Seattle, WA Mary Myslewicz, MPA, Knowledge Management Advisor, Casey Family Programs, Seattle, WA C-2 Trauma Informed Legal Services for Youth in Foster Case: Best Practices and Ethical Considerations in Integrating Legal and Mental Health Services in Clinical Settings This session will focus on best practices for integrated legal and mental health services for foster care youth impacted by trauma. Steven Berkowitz, MD, Director, University of Pennsylvania Center for Youth and Family Trauma, Philadelphia, PA Kara Finck, Esq., Director, University of Pennsylvania Law School Interdisciplinary Child Advocacy Clinic, Philadelphia, PA C-3 Child Maltreatment Research, Policy, and Practice for the Next Decade This presentation discusses the Institute of Medicine – National Research Council Board on Children, Youth, and Families’ comprehensive study of child maltreatment policy, research, and practice. Kimber Bogard, PhD, Director, Board on Children, Youth and Families, Institute of Medicine/National Research Council, Washington, DC Alejandra Martin, MPH, Research Associate, Board on Children, Youth, and Families, Institute of Medicine/National Research Council, Washington, DC C-4 I Can Tell You Because You’re a Doctor: The Role of the Medical History in Understanding and Meeting the Diagnosis and Treatment Needs of Sexually Abused Children This workshop will elucidate the importance of the medical history in understanding child sexual victimization and the formulation of a defensible medical diagnosis. Martin A. Finkel, DO, Professor of Pediatrics, Director, CARES Institute, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Stratford, NJ C-5 Children of Incarcerated Parents in the Child Welfare System This session will focus on children of incarcerated parents in the child welfare system, and will incorporate current knowledge, legal requirements, and best practices. Kathleen Creamer, Esq., Stoneleigh Fellow, Staff Attorney, Community Legal Services, Philadelphia, PA Ann Adalist–Estrin, MS, Director, National Resource Center on Children & Families of the Incarcerated, Family & Corrections Network, Jenkintown, PA C-6 KEEP: A Foster and Kinship Parent Training Program Impacting Permanency Outcomes KEEP, a training program, will be described and findings of permanency and placement stability outcomes for children and retention of foster/kinship providers will be presented. Elizabeth J. Greeno, PhD, LCSW-C, Research Assistant Professor, University of Maryland School of Social Work, Baltimore, MD Richard P. Barth, PhD, MSW, Dean and Professor, University of Maryland School of Social Work, Baltimore, MD Mathew Uretsky, Program Manager, University of Maryland School of Social Work, Baltimore, MD

PAGE 7 One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare June 12-14, 2013

PROGRAM GUIDE Thursday, June 13 (continued) 10:45 am – 11:00 am Coffee Break/View Exhibits 11:00 am – 12:00 pm Plenary Panel II Tracking Child Abuse & Neglect: The Role of Multiple Data Sources in Improving Child Safety Philip V. Scribano, DO, MSCE, Medical Director, Safe Place: The Center for Child Protection and Health, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia; Professor of Pediatrics, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine Joanne Wood, MD, MSHP, Attending Physician, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine Sarah Zlotnik, MSW, MSPH, Senior Strategist, PolicyLab, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia John Mattingly, Senior Fellow, Annie E. Casey Foundation 12:00 pm – 1:35 pm Networking Luncheon Luncheon Keynote Speaker Hon. Louise Williams Bishop, Pennsylvania State Representative and Democratic Chair, PA House of Representatives Committee on Children and Youth 1:45 pm – 3:15 pm Workshop Session D D-1 Assessing Child Neglect in a Pediatric Hospital Setting This workshop will explore the challenges faced by social workers and child abuse pediatricians in the assessment of child neglect. Celeste R. Wilson, MD, Associate Medical Director, Child Protection Program, Boston Children’s Hospital; Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA Beth Kaiser Jones, MSW, LICSW, Director of Department of Emergency Medicine Social Work Program; Child Protection Program Clinical Consultant, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA D-2 Performance Based Contracting for Foster Care: Ten Years of Permanency Performance and Lessons Learned This presentation describes how Performance Based Contracting realigned foster care practice to increase permanency and stability for children and families. Danielle Reh, MSW, Administrator, Performance Management and Accountability, Philadelphia Department of Human Services, Philadelphia, PA Cathy A. Fuller, MSW, LSW, Permanency Services Program Coordinator, Bethanna, Southampton, PA Emily DeLeon, BSW, Program Analyst, Performance Management and Accountability, Philadelphia Department of Human Services, Philadelphia, PA D-3 Using GIS to Reduce Foster Youth School Mobility in California This presentation discusses how California child welfare agencies use a web-based GIS (Geographic Information System) to find placements for foster children and reduce school mobility. Virginia D’Amico, Project Specialist II, Sacramento County Office of Education, Sacramento, CA Cathy White, Project Specialist II, Sacramento County Office of Education, Sacramento, CA

D-4 Ethical Considerations in Child Forensic Interviews and Evaluations Child forensic interviewing presents unique ethical challenges. Children rarely appreciate the why, how, and what of evaluations, and therefore are incapable of giving informed consent. Gillian Blair, PhD, LLM, Forensic Psychologist, Fellow, The Field Center for Children’s Policy, Practice & Research, Private Practice, Narberth, PA D-5 Promoting the Resilience of Children and Families in Supervised Visitation Services This presentation describes development and evaluation of a resilience-building model for visitation facilitation services. Practical tools will be introduced for use with children and families. Gabriel Smith, MA, Research Associate, Devereux Center for Resilient Children, Villanova, PA Jennifer Fleming, MS, Research Associate, Devereux Center for Resilient Children, Villanova, PA D-6 Raising the Bar: The Role of Class Action Litigation in Setting Standards for Child Welfare This session will examine the limitations and opportunities presented by class action court orders requiring child welfare systems to deliver better outcomes for children and families. Marcia Lowry, Esq., Executive Director, Children’s Rights, New York, NY Laurie Bensky, MSW, Senior Policy Analyst, Children’s Rights, New York, NY

PAGE 8 ONE CHILD, MANY HANDS: REGISTRATION FORM A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare REGISTER ONLINE @ June 12–14, 2013 www.onechildmanyhands.org University of Pennsylvania Please complete one form per registrant Philadelphia, PA

NAME (First) (M.I.) (Last)

TITLE AGENCY

ADDRESS (Street) (Room or Suite) (City) (State) (Zip Code) ( ) X PHONE EXTENSION EMAIL

I would like to receive the Field Center Newsletter and notification of future trainings. I need accommodations for the following SPECIAL NEEDS:

Thursday, June 12 Networking Luncheon (included in the cost of registration) Featured Speaker: Hon. Louise Williams Bishop I will attend this event I am unable to attend this event Thursday, June 13 Optional Chef Tasting Dinner ($34 additional) Dinner at Iron Chef Jose Garces’ restaurant, Distrito I will attend this event Friday, June 14 Networking Luncheon (included in the cost of registration) Closing Keynote Speaker: Lisa Nutter I will attend this event I am unable to attend this event

SELECT YOUR 1ST, 2 ND, AND 3RD CHOICES FOR WORKSHOPS IN EACH SESSION (Workshop descriptions and tracks are found on pages 5 through 13 of the conference brochure)

Wednesday, June 12 Workshop A: 11:00 am – 12:30 pm 1st choice _____ 2nd choice _____ 3rd choice _____ Workshop B: 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm 1st choice _____ 2nd choice _____ 3rd choice _____

Thursday, June 13 Workshop C: 9:15 am – 10:45 am 1st choice _____ 2nd choice _____ 3rd choice _____ Workshop D: 1:45 pm – 3:15 pm 1st choice _____ 2nd choice _____ 3rd choice _____

Friday, June 14 Workshop E: 8:30 am – 10:00 am 1st choice _____ 2nd choice _____ 3rd choice _____ Workshop F: 11:30 am – 1:00 pm 1st choice _____ 2nd choice _____ 3rd choice _____ Please complete both sides of the registration form. Please complete both sides of the registration REGISTRATION FORM (continued) FEES & PAYMENTS

CHOOSE ONE Early Registration (payment received by April 26, 2013) $420 Advance Registration (payment received by May 31, 2013) $450 Group Discounts available. Please contact the Conference Manager for more information at [email protected]

DINNER AT DISTRITO $34

CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITS (Optional; Please choose only one) Please see additional information below Social Work (18 CEUs) $30 Marriage and Family Therapists (18 CEUs) $30 Professional Counselors (18 CEUs) $30 Law (please see below) payable on-site only

I would like to make a tax-deductible contribution to the Field Center $ ______

PAYMENT TOTAL $ ______

PAYMENT METHOD Please note: you may register online and still pay by check. Pay by Check (Please make checks payable to the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania)

Visa Master Card American Express Discover

Card Number ______Expiration Date ______

Name of card holder: ______

CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITS Continuing education credits are available in the following disciplines. If you would like to receive CEUs, please indicate the appropriate discipline on the registration form. Only one certificate will be processed per participant.

Social Workers, Marriage and Family Therapists, and Professional Counselors: Participants who attend the entire conference are eligible to receive 18 Continuing Education Units (CEUs) through the University of Pennsylvania School of Social Policy & Practice. Those who attend both Plenary Panel I and either Workshop C-2 (Trauma Informed Legal Services for Youth in Foster Case: Best Practices and Ethical Considerations in Integrating Legal and Mental Health Services in Clinical Settings) or Workshop D-4 (Ethical Considerations in Child Forensic Interviewing and Evaluations) will earn 3 of their 18 CEUs in Ethics. The Penn School of Social Policy & Practice is a pre-approved provider of continuing education credits for Pennsylvania licensed Social Workers, Marriage and Family Therapists, and Professional Counselors. Those from states other than Pennsylvania should contact their licensing board to determine whether CEUs granted by the Penn School of Social Policy & Practice are accepted for licensure renewal. A $30 processing fee must be included at the time of registration.

Attorneys: One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare has been approved for 14.5 total CLE credit hours for Pennsylvania lawyers. CLE credit may be available in other jurisdictions as well. Pennsylvania attorneys can complete their annual CLE requirement with full participation in the conference. The fee is $15 per credit hour or $145 for the full conference ($70 for public interest attorneys). Approved Workshops are 1.5 credit hours and each Plenary Panel and Dorothy Roberts’ Keynote Address is 1.0 credit hours. Each session marked by a has been approved for substantive law credit for Pennsylvania lawyers, and each session marked by a has been approved for ethics law credit for Pennsylvania lawyers. Registration and payment for CLE credit cannot be made in advance but is payable at the conference via check to the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania.

REGISTRATION INSTRUCTIONS Register online at or mail registration and payment to: or fax your forms and payment www.onechildmanyhands.org One Child, Many Hands information to: 3815 Walnut Street (215) 573-7199 Philadelphia, PA 19104 Questions? Contact Sarah Porter, Conference Manager at (215) 573-9779 or [email protected] REGISTER ONLINE AT WWW.ONECHILDMANYHANDS.ORG

Thursday, June 13 (continued) PROGRAM GUIDE 3:15 pm – 3:30 pm Break/View Exhibits 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm Plenary Panel III Jerry Sandusky as an Agent of Social Change: Pennsylvania’s Efforts at Reform – A View From the Inside Panelists: Linda Kelly, Esq., Former Pennsylvania Attorney General Bev Mackereth, Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare Hon. David Heckler, Bucks County District Attorney and Chair of Pennsylvania Task Force on Child Protection Cindy Christian, MD, Chair in the Prevention of Child Abuse & Neglect at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Medical Director of the Philadelphia Department of Human Services, and member of the Pennsylvania Task Force on Child Protection Hon. Kathy Watson, Majority Chair, Pennsylvania House Committee on Children and Youth Moderator: Richard J. Gelles, PhD, Dean of the University of Pennsylvania School of Social Policy & Practice, the Joanne and Raymond Welsh Chair of Child Welfare and Family Violence 6:00 pm Optional Special Event: Dinner at Iron Chef Jose Garces’ signature restaurant, Distrito

OPTIONAL THURSDAY NIGHT EVENT Join Your Colleagues for a Private Dining Experience Experience Philadelphia’s own Iron Chef, Jose Garces, with dinner at his signature restaurant, Distrito. Located in University City, conference guests will enjoy a private dinner with a chef-selected tasting menu. Join your fellow conference attendees for a fun and relaxing evening, just minutes away from the conference site.

Since opening his first restaurant, Amada, in 2005, Chef Garces has emerged as an enormous talent and one of the nation’s most gifted young chefs. Currently, Chef Garces owns seven restaurants in Philadelphia, three in Atlantic City, as well as restaurants in Scottsdale, Arizona, Palm Springs, California and Chicago. He has authored numerous cookbooks, most recently The Latin Road Home. Chef Garces won the James Beard Foundation’s prestigious “Best Chef Mid-Atlantic” award in 2009 and appeared on Food Network’s Iron Chef America, winning the 6th season of The Next Iron Chef.

CHEF JOSE GARCES MASTER OF LATIN CUISINE

PAGE 11 One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare June 12-14, 2013

PROGRAM GUIDE FRIDAY, JUNE 14

8:00 am – 8:30 am Continental Breakfast/View Exhibits 8:30 am – 10:00 am Workshop Session E E-1 The Need for Early and Comprehensive Child and Family Assessment for Adequate Case Planning This presentation addresses the need for, process of, and case planning value of comprehensive family assessments in child welfare cases. Frank E. Vandevort, JD, Clinical Professor of Law, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI Kathleen Coulborn Faller, PhD, ACSW, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI E-2 The Cost of Child Abuse This session presents the result of a study that calculated the annual cost of child maltreatment. The costs include the direct costs, including child welfare and criminal justice, as well as the in-direct costs, including loss of work productivity. Richard J. Gelles, PhD, Dean, Joanne and Raymond Welsh Chair of Child Welfare and Family Violence, University of Pennsylvania School of Social Policy & Practice, Philadelphia, PA E-3 Evaluation of the Roots and Wing Initiative: Giving Children Roots to Grow and Wings to Fly This presentation describes core components and evaluation findings from a comprehensive model of recruitment and support services for foster and kin caregivers. Kathy Lemon Osterling, MSW, PhD, Associate Professor, School of Social Work, San Jose State University, San Jose, CA Amy D’Andrade, MSW, PhD, Associate Professor, School of Social Work, San Jose State University, San Jose, CA Sherra Clinton, MSW, Senior Analyst, Santa Cruz County Family & Children’s Services, Santa Cruz, CA Melissa Delgadillo, Program Manager, Santa Cruz County Family & Children’s Services, Santa Cruz, CA E-4 Understanding the Role of Social Support in Relation to Parenting Stress and Risk of Child Maltreatment Among Asian American Immigrant Parents This session aims to disseminate the research findings on the role of social support in relation to parenting stress and risk of child maltreatment among Asian American immigrant parents. Anderson Sungmin Yoon, DSW, LCSW-R, RPT-S, CASAC, ACT, Assistant Project Director, The Child Center of New York Asian Clinic, Flushing, NY Tae Kuen Kim, PhD, Assistant Professor, Adelphi University School of Social Work, Garden City, NY E-5 Enhancing Well-Being for Children Involved in the Child Welfare System: Nurses Need to be Part of the Team Nurses and social workers collaborate to enhance the wellbeing of children in the child welfare system so that health needs are adequately identified and met. Kathleen Nolan Torrisi, RN, MSN, Nurse Consultant, Child Health Consultants, Philadelphia, PA Mari Ann Campbell, RN, MSN, Nurse Consultant, Child Health Consultants, Philadelphia, PA E-6 Baltimore Citywide Child Protection Team: A Multidisciplinary Approach This session will discuss a model for improving the comprehensive response to maltreatment by increasing primary care provider involvement; providing expert medical consultation, and enhancing multidisciplinary collaboration. Wendy G. Lane, MD, MPH, Associate Director, Preventive Medicine Residency Program, Assistant Professor, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health & Department of Pediatrics, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD Leslie Schnoll Fitzpatrick, LCSW-C, Child Protection Team Coordinator, Maryland Child Abuse Medical Professionals (CHAMP) Program Manager, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD Mitchell Goldstein, MD, MBA, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Director of the Johns Hopkins University Child Protection Team, Medical Director of Urgent Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD Ernest Reitz, Esq., Assistant State’s Attorney, Special Victims Unit – Child Victim Team, Office of the State’s Attorney for Baltimore City, Baltimore, MD 10:00 am – 10:15 am Coffee Break/View Exhibits 10:15 am – 11:15 am Plenary Panel IV Sponsored by Philadelphia Children’s Alliance Structuring Child Advocacy Centers to Meet Community Needs: A Comparison of Three Solutions Panelists: Mary Whittier, Executive Director, Bivona Child Advocacy Center, Rochester, NY Cathy Brittis, MSW, Program Manager, Child Advocacy Center of Grafton and Sullivan Counties, Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth, Hitchcock, VT Walter Akers, Director, Carroll County Child Advocacy Center, Westminster, MD Moderator: Chris Kirchner, MSW, Executive Director, Philadelphia Children’s Alliance

PAGE 12 REGISTER ONLINE AT WWW.ONECHILDMANYHANDS.ORG

Friday, June 14 (continued) PROGRAM GUIDE 11:30 am – 1:00 pm Workshop Session F F-1 Building Bridges of Hope: Supporting Healing and Growth for Children Who Have Experienced Trauma This session will address the impact of trauma on children across developmental stages, specific strategies for caregivers and caseworkers, and the role of reflective supervision to ensure that trauma-informed work is supported and sustained. Susan Badeau, Child Welfare Consultant, National Advisor to National Child Traumatic Stress Network, Philadelphia, PA F-2 One in Four: Learning How to Identify, Connect, and Plan for Children with International Family Resources This session will teach best practices and skills needed to fully exercise due diligence in family finding and engagement across state and national borders. Wendy B. Jeffries, Program Manager, ISS-USA, Baltimore, MD Felicity S. Northcott, PhD, Director of External Partnerships and Intercountry Services, ISS-USA, Baltimore, MD F-3 Using the NCANDS Data to Compare Fatal and Non-Fatal Maltreatment This presentation uses the 2010 NCANDS data to report on the differences between fatal and non-fatal maltreatment: victim, caregiver, household, and service characteristics. Emily M. Douglas, PhD, Associate Professor, Bridgewater State University, Bridgewater, MA F-4 Transitioning From the Child Welfare System for Youth with Disabilities and Special Needs This workshop will provide participants resources and strategies for ensuring that youth with special needs transition successfully from the child welfare system. Jenny Pokempner, Esq., Supervising Attorney, Juvenile Law Center, Philadelphia, PA Laura DeRiggi, MSW, Director Special Projects, Philadelphia Department of Behavioral Health; Director of Clinical Services, Philadelphia Department of Human Services, Philadelphia, PA Rachel Mann, Esq., Senior Staff Attorney, Disability Rights Network of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA F-5 Addressing Intimate Partner Violence in a Pediatric Setting: The CAMP Screening and Intervention Model In 1998, the American Academy of Pediatrics stated that to prevent child abuse, routine screening of all female caregivers should be a standard of care. The presenters will share their findings from a domestic violence training and screening intervention in a pediatric setting. Ramona Peralta, Medical Advocate, Lutheran Settlement House, Philadelphia, PA India Azzinaro, Health Care Liaison, Lutheran Settlement House, Philadelphia, PA F-6 A Look at Three New Models Aimed at Engagement and Support of Youth and Families in the Child Welfare System This session will offer descriptions of three practices that enhance engagement and support of families in contact with child welfare, and staff, youth and family perceptions of these programs. Berenice Rushovich, MSW, Research Specialist, University of Maryland School of Social Work, Baltimore, MD Elizabeth Greeno, PhD, Research Assistant Professor, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD Karen Powell, LCSW-C, Manager, Training and Organizational Development, Office of Child Welfare Practice & Policy, DHS/Social Services Administration, Baltimore, MD Sarah Catherine Williams, MSW, Senior Research Analyst, Child Trends, Bethesda, MD Ligia Teoderovici, LGSW, Kinship Navigator, Washington County Department of Social Services, Hagerstown, MD Tammie Campher, LCSW, Family Finder, Washington County Department of Social Services, Hagerstown, MD 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm Networking Luncheon Closing Keynote Address: Lisa Nutter, President of Philadelphia Academies, Inc.

WORKSHOP TRACKS Behavioral health and parent education A-3 B-2 B-6 C-2 C-6 D-4 F-1 F-4

Child fatalities A-1 F-3

Community partnerships, and multidisciplinary teams A-1 B-4 B-6 C-1 C-2 E-5 E-6 F-4 F-6

Cultural diversity B-5 E-4 F-2

Domestic violence B-3 F-5

Foster care and permanency A-2 A-6 B-2 C-2 C-6 D-2 D-3 D-5 E-5 F-2 F-4

Legal and justice issues A-4 A-5 A-6 A-2 B-4 C-2 C-5 D-4 D-6 E-6 F-4

Medical and health topics A-6 B-4 C-4 D-1 E-5 E-6 F-5

Policy A-1 A-4 B-3 B-4 C-1 C-3 C-5 D-2 D-6 E-2

Practice, interventions, and skill development A-2 A-3 A-6 B-2 B-3 B-6 C-1 C-2 C-6 D-4 D-5 E-1 F-1 F-2 F-5 F-6

Research A-5 B-2 B-5 C-3 E-4 F-3

School, truancy, and education issues B-6 D-3

Special populations and consumer perspective A-2 A-3 B-2 C-5 E-4 F-2 F-4 F-6 PAGE 13 One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare June 12-14, 2013

CONFERENCE FACULTY Walter Akers Kimber Bogard, PhD Melissa Delgadillo Cathy A. Fuller, MSW, LSW Director Director Program Manager Program Coordinator Carroll County Child Advocacy Center Board on Children, Youth and Families Santa Cruz County Family & Permanency Services Westminster, MD Institute of Medicine Children’s Services Bethanna National Research Council Santa Cruz, CA Southampton, PA Ann Adalist–Estrin, MS Washington, DC Director Laura DeRiggi, MSW Richard Gehrman, MBA National Resource Center on Cathy Brittis, MSW Director Special Projects Executive Director Children & Families of the Incarcerated Program Manager Philadelphia Dept. of Behavioral Health Safe Passage for Children Familiy & Corrections Network Child Advocacy Center of Grafton and Director of Clinical Services St. Paul, MN Jenkintown, PA Sullivan Counties Philadelphia Dept. of Human Services Richard J. Gelles, PhD Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth Philadelphia, PA Miriam Alkon, PsyD Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Hitchcock, VT Psychologist Emily M. Douglas, PhD School of Social Policy & Practice Infant-Parent Court-Affiliated Intervention Daniel Brown, BA Associate Professor and Joanne and Raymond Welsh Chair Project Outreach Worker Bridgewater State University of Child Welfare and Family Violence Albert Einstein College of Medicine Allentown School District Bridgewater, MA Philadelphia, PA Bronx, NY Allentown, PA Maggie Eisen, MSS, MLSP Mitchell Goldstein, MD, MBA India Azzinaro Mari Ann Campbell, RN, MSN Stoneleigh Fellow Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Health Care Liaison Nurse Consultant The Health Federation of Philadelphia Director of the Johns Hopkins University Lutheran Settlement House Child Health Consultants Philadelphia, PA Child Protection Team Philadelphia, PA Philadelphia, PA Medical Director of Urgent Care Medicine Kathleen Coulborn Faller, PhD, ACSW Kathleen Coulborn Faller, PhD, ACSW Johns Hopkins University Susan Badeau Tammie Campher, LCSW University of Michigan School of Medicine Child Welfare Consultant Family Finder Ann Arbor, MI Baltimore, MD National Advisor Washington County Department of Social Mike Feeley National Child Traumatic Stress Network Services Elizabeth J. Greeno, PhD, LCSW-C Director of Content Philadelphia, PA Hagerstown, MD Research Assistant Professor Pennlive.com/The Patriot-News University of Maryland Alicen Bailey-Silfies, BA Cindy Christian, MD Harrisburg, PA School of Social Work Home & School Visitor Chair in the Prevention of Jessica Feierman, Esq. Baltimore, MD Allentown School District Child Abuse & Neglect and Supervising Attorney Allentown, PA Co-Director of Safe Place: Steven F. Grilli, ACSW, LSW Juvenile Law Center The Center for Child Protection & Health Senior Clinical Research Assistant Richard P. Barth, PhD, MSW Philadelphia, PA Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Center for Pediatric Traumatic Stress Dean and Professor Professor of Pediatrics Risa Vetri Ferman, Esq. The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia University of Maryland Univ. of Penn Perelman School of Medicine District Attorney Philadelphia, PA School of Social Work Medical Director Montgomery County Baltimore, MD Kai Guterman, MA, MPP Philadelphia Dept. of Human Services Norristown, Pennsylvania Knowledge Management Advisor Daniel Basch Philadelphia, PA Kara Finck, Esq. Casey Family Programs BA Candidate Sherra Clinton, MSW Director Seattle, WA Muhlenberg College Senior Analyst Interdisciplinary Child Advocacy Clinic Psychology Department Hazel Guzman, MA Santa Cruz County Family & University of Pennsylvania Law School Allentown, PA Child Development Specialist Children’s Services Philadelphia, PA Infant-Parent Court-Affiliated Laurie Bensky, MSW Santa Cruz, CA Martin A. Finkel, DO Intervention Project Senior Policy Analyst Kathleen Creamer, Esq. Professor of Pediatrics Albert Einstein College of Medicine Children’s Rights Stoneleigh Fellow Director Bronx, NY New York, NY Staff Attorney CARES Institute Hon. David Heckler Steven Berkowitz, MD Community Legal Services University of Medicine and Dentistry of District Attorney Director Philadelphia, PA New Jersey Bucks County University of Pennsylvania Stratford, NJ Teri Covington, MPH Doylestown, PA Center for Youth and Family Trauma Executive Director Antwone Fisher Philadelphia, PA Rick Heyman, PhD National Center for the Review and Screenwriter and Author Professor Hon. Louise Williams Bishop Prevention of Child Deaths Los Angeles, CA New York University Pennsylvania State Representative Washington, DC Leslie Schnoll Fitzpatrick, LCSW-C New York, NY 192nd Legislative District Virginia D’Amico Child Protection Team Coordinator Democratic Chair Karen Hudson, MSW, LSW Project Specialist II Maryland Child Abuse Medical Pennsylvania House of Representatives Program Leader Sacramento County Office of Education Professionals (CHAMP) Program Manager Children & Youth Committee Homeless Health Initiative Sacramento, CA University of Maryland School of Medicine Harrisburg and Philadelphia, PA Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Baltimore, MD Amy D’Andrade, MSW, PhD Philadelphia, PA Gillian Blair, PhD, LLM Associate Professor Gayle Flavin, MSW Forensic Psychologist Wendy B. Jeffries School of Social Work Director of Training & Implementation Fellow, Field Center for Program Manager San Jose State University Extreme Recruitment Children’s Policy, Practice & Research ISS-USA San Jose, CA Foster & Adoptive Care Coalition Private Practice Baltimore, MD St. Louis, MO Narberth, PA Kimberly Day, MSW Michael Jernegan, BA Deputy Director Jennifer Fleming, MS Melissa Boandi, MEd MSW Candidate National Children’s Alliance Research Associate Counselor Widener University Washington, DC Devereux Center for Resilient Children Mosser Elementary School Center for Social Work Education Villanova, PA Allentown, PA Emily DeLeon, BSW Chester, PA Program Analyst Performance Management & Accountability Philadelphia Dept. of Human Services Philadelphia, PA

PAGE 14 REGISTER ONLINE AT WWW.ONECHILDMANYHANDS.ORG

CONFERENCE FACULTY Beth Kaiser Jones, MSW, LICSW Alejandra Martin, MPH Danielle Reh, MSW Kathleen Nolan Torrisi, RN, MSN Director Research Associate Administrator Nurse Consultant Department of Emergency Medicine Board on Children, Youth, and Families Performance Management and Child Health Consultants Social Work Program Institute of Medicine Accountability Philadelphia, PA Child Protection Program National Research Council Philadelphia Dept. of Human Services Mathew Uretsky Clinical Consultant Washington, DC Philadelphia, PA Program Manager Boston Children’s Hospital John Mattingly Ernest Reitz, Esq. University of Maryland Boston, MA Senior Fellow Assistant State’s Attorney School of Social Work Shloka Joshi, JD Annie E. Casey Foundation Special Victims Unit – Child Victim Team Baltimore, MD Public Health Fellow, HELP Baltimore, MD Office of the State’s Attorney Frank E. Vandevort, JD MLP, Community Hospital for Baltimore City Kelly McBride Clinical Professor of Law Chester, PA Baltimore, MD Senior Faculty University of Michigan Canan Karatekin, PhD Ethics, Reporting and Writing Dorothy Roberts, JD Ann Arbor, MI Associate Professor The Poynter Institute Penn Integrates Knowledge Professor Hon. Katharine Watson Institute of Child Development St. Petersburg, FL George A. Weiss University Professor Pennsylvania State Representative University of Minnesota Raymond Pace and Mary Myslewicz, MPA 144th Legislative District Minneapolis, MN Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander Professor Knowledge Management Advisor Majority Chair of Civil Rights Linda Kelly, Esq. Casey Family Programs Pennsylvania House of Representatives University of Pennsylvania Former Pennsylvania Attorney General Seattle, WA Children & Youth Committee Philadelphia, PA Pittsburgh, PA Harrisburg and Bucks County, PA Felicity S. Northcott, PhD Dan Romer, PhD Tae Kuen Kim, PhD Director of External Partnerships and Cathy White Director Assistant Professor Intercountry Services Project Specialist II Adolescent Communication Institute Adelphi University School of Social Work ISS-USA Sacramento County Office of Education Annenberg Public Policy Center Garden City, NY Baltimore, MD Sacramento, CA University of Pennsylvania Chris Kirchner, MSW Lisa Nutter Philadelphia, PA Mary Whittier Executive Director President Executive Director Berenice Rushovich, MSW Philadelphia Children’s Alliance Philadelphia Academies Bivona Child Advocacy Center Research Specialist Northeast Regional Office Philadelphia, PA Rochester, NY University of Maryland National Children’s Alliance Melanie Ohmes, JD School of Social Work Jesse L. Wilkinson, MA Philadelphia, PA Director of 30 Days to Family Baltimore, MD Doctoral Candidate Jack Kresnak Foster & Adoptive Care Coalition Stony Brook University Philip V. Scribano, DO, MSCE Former Child Welfare Reporter St. Louis, MO Port Jefferson Station, NY Medical Director of Safe Place: Detroit Free Press Kathy Lemon Osterling, MSW, PhD The Center for Child Protection & Health Sarah Catherine Williams, MSW Livonia, MI Associate Professor Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Senior Research Analyst Wendy G. Lane, MD, MPH School of Social Work Professor of Pediatrics Child Trends Associate Director San Jose State University Univ. of Penn Perelman School of Medicine Bethesda, MD Preventive Medicine Residency Program San Jose, CA Philadelphia, PA Celeste R. Wilson, MD Assistant Professor Staci Perlman, MSW, PhD Sandy Sheller, MA, ATR-BC, LPC Associate Medical Director Department of Epidemiology and Public Assistant Professor Clinical Director of Independent Projects Child Protection Program Health & Department of Pediatrics Kutztown University Assistant Clinical Professor Boston Children’s Hospital University of MarylandSchool of Medicine Kutztown, PA The Salvation Army Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Baltimore, MD Drexel University Harvard Medical School Ramona Peralta Jamie Lawler, MA Philadelphia, PA Boston, MA Medical Advocate Graduate Student Lutheran Settlement House Judith A. Silver, PhD Joanne Wood, MD, MSHP Institute of Child Development Philadelphia, PA Director of Child Welfare & Juvenile Attending Physician University of Minnesota Justice Initiatives Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Minneapolis, MN Stephanie E. Petner, MPA Center for Pediatric Traumatic Stress Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Truancy Intervention Coordinator Jennifer Lawson, MSSW The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Univ. of Penn Perelman School of Medicine Mosser Village Family Center PhD Candidate Philadelphia, PA Philadelphia, PA Allentown, PA University of California – Berkeley Gabriel Smith, MA Anderson Sungmin Yoon, DSW, Oakland, CA Roger D. Phillips, PhD Research Associate LCSW-R, RPT-S, CASAC, ACT Developmental Psychologist and Evaluation Kristen Lombardi Devereux Center for Resilient Children Assistant Project Director Consultant Investigative Reporter Villanova, PA The Child Center of New York Lehigh County Office of Children The Center for Public Integrity Flushing, NY & Youth Services Amy Smith-Slep, PhD Former Staff Writer Alburtis, PA Professor Sarah Zlotnik, MSW, MSPH The Boston Phoenix New York University Senior Strategist Washington, DC Jenny Pokempner, Esq. New York, NY PolicyLab Supervising Attorney Marcia Lowry, Esq. Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Juvenile Law Center Heather Taussig, PhD Executive Director Philadelphia, PA Philadelphia, PA Associate Professor Children’s Rights Kempe Center KimKim Zsitek-Brannan,Zsitek-Brannan, RN,RN, CSN,CSN, MSN,MSN, CRPN New York, NY Karen Powell, LCSW-C University of Colorado Nurse Manager Bev Mackereth Aurora, CO Mosser Elementary School Training and Organizational Development Secretary Allentown, PA Office of Child Welfare Practice & Policy Ligia Teoderovici, LGSW Pennsylvania Department of DHS/Social Services Administration Kinship Navigator Public Welfare Baltimore, MD Washington County Department Harrisburg, PA of Social Services Alan Puckett, PhD, MSSW Rachel Mann, Esq. Hagerstown, MD Knowledge Management Advisory Senior Staff Attorney Casey Family Programs Disability Rights Network of Pennsylvania Seattle, WA Philadelphia, PA PAGE 15 One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare June 12-14, 2013

CONFERENCE INFORMATION Welcome to Philadelphia, home of great sports, great food, and great culture! We hope that during your stay, you will explore our exciting, vibrant city. In addition to being a vital part of our nation’s history, Philadelphia also features a wealth of museums and galleries, restaurants from the world’s top chefs, championship sports teams, and a lively cultural scene. This year Philadelphia is host to the 2013 U.S. Open, golf’s toughest test. For further information and to check on ticket availability, please visit www.usopen.com. Plan a visit to Philadelphia’s world renowned Barnes Foundation. The Barnes Foundation houses one of the largest art collections in the world. Visitor information can be found on their website at www.barnesfoundation.org. For information on these exhibits and other attractions in the Philadelphia area, visit the Independence Visitor Center at www.independencevisitorcenter.com, in person at 6th and Market Streets, or by calling 800-537-7676. The Center is open daily from 8:30 am to 7:00 pm.

VENDOR / EXHIBITOR INFORMATION One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare offers a great opportunity for exhibitors to showcase program and products to a diverse group of professionals. Daily continental breakfast and all breaks are held in the exhibition area, allowing excellent exposure for vendors. Information for potential vendors and exhibitors can be found on the conference website at www.onechildmanyhands.org or by contacting Sarah Porter at (215) 573-9779 or [email protected] HOTEL ACCOMMODATIONS: One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare is pleased to offer registrants special rates at a number of area hotels. Rates are guaranteed only for reservations made prior to Tuesday, April 30th and are subject to availability.

Club Quarters Sonesta Hotel The Inn at Penn (Hilton) $116 per night $155 per night best available rate 1628 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia 1800 Market Street, Philadelphia 36th & Sansom Streets, Philadelphia Parking available - $23 per day Parking available - $42 per day Parking available (valet only) - $35 Reservations: Reservations: overnight Call (203) 905-2100 during regular Call (617) 806-4653. You must Reservations: business hours for Member identify yourself with the University Call (215) 222-0200. Services. You must identify yourself of Pennsylvania and mention group with the University of Pennsylvania code ONEC06112013 when This hotel is located a few blocks from and mention group code U0P611 reserving by phone. the conference site. for use of this hotel. This hotel is located approximately This hotel is located approximately 2 miles east of the conference site 2 miles east of the conference site in the bustling Center City area of in the bustling Center City area of Philadelphia. Philadelphia.

CONTACT INFORMATION Mailing Address: Sarah Porter One Child, Many Hands E-mail: [email protected] The Field Center Telephone: (215) 573-9779 for Children’s Policy, Practice & Research Fax: (215) 573-7199 3815 Walnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19104

PAGE 16 REGISTER ONLINE AT WWW.ONECHILDMANYHANDS.ORG

CONFERENCE INFORMATION Walnut Street CONFERENCE LOCATION SPECIAL NEEDS All session locations are fully ADA compliant. For those 38th Street This year’s conference is being held at the University of needing assistance, please specify your needs on the Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine’s new Smilow registration form. Huntsman Annenberg Center for Translational Research. The Smilow building is located at 3400Walnut Civic CenterStreet Blvd, adjacent to the CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDIT Hall Center Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine and across the 33rd StreetOne Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference street from the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. on Child Welfare has been approved to offer continuing The conference site is accessible through the Perelman education credit in Social Work, Marriage and Family Center for Advanced Medicine (3400 Civic Center Blvd). Therapy, Professional Counseling, and Law. One Upon your arrival, enter through the revolving doors certificate is available per registrant who attends the and ride the escalators to the 2nd floor. Registration entire conference. A fee of $30 applies for processing and all conference sessions (The Smilow Center for of each Social Work, Marriage and Family Therapy, and Translational Research) will be located to your right, Professional Counselor certificate. Continuing Legal through the corridor. Please follow all signage. Education credits cost $15 per credit hour or $145 ($70 for public interest attorneys) for the full conference. A If traveling by car, from the Schuykill Expressway, exit 34th Street maximum of 18 CEUs for Social Workers, Marriage and 346A, South Street, turning west onto South Street. Turn Family Therapists, and Professional Counselors and 14.5 left onto 34th Street. The Smilow Center for Translation CLE credits for Attorneys are available, including credit Spruce Street Research (enter at the Perelman Center for Advanced 38th Street in Ethics. It is the attendee’s responsibility to sign in and Medicine) will be on your left. out in order to receive continuing education credit. For Public Transportation: The Airport train33rd leaves Street every half your convenience, a Continuing Education table will be th hourSpruce and stops Street at 30 Street Station and at University set up in the Conference Registration area. Please see Station, (see map), directly behind Penn Tower. The train the conference registration form for more details. fare is about $5 and takes 20 minutes. Hospital of theIf traveling within the city, Septa’s 42 bus provides direct University of Pennsylvaniaaccess to the conference site.

South Street 36th Street PARKING Walnut Street Parking is available at Penn Tower Huntsman Annenberg Garage for $20 per day. To Hall Center Walnut Street park at Penn Tower, turn left on 33rd Street

38th Street Lo Convention Avenue (from Health cust Walk Sciences Drive) and right into the garage.

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PAGE 17 One Child, Many Hands: A Multidisciplinary Conference on Child Welfare The Field Center for Children’s Policy, Practice & Research 3815 Walnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19104

Phone: (215) 573-9779 Fax: (215) 573-7199 E-Mail: [email protected] Website: www.onechildmanyhands.org