Strategy:

Ask youth about their kin

Youth are often placed in general foster care or group homes when they have placement options with adults they already know and trust. Asking Youth about the supportive adults in their lives can help find more kin placements faster, and avoid unnecessary placements with strangers.

How to do this

Make asking about connections a standard practice. Require workers to talk to youth about their connections, no matter how young. Supervisors can encourage this by regularly asking, "What did the youth say?" Ask youth about their supportive connections at every placement change and at regular intervals, like monthly check-ins.

Use careful, non-threatening language. Phrase inquiries so young people don't feel like they have to supply a placement option or they'll be homeless. Helpful prompts include: "Who came to your last family gathering?" and "Who would you call if you needed a ride home from school?"

Document and maintain connections. Designate an official place in your IT system for keeping a youth's list of kin. Use heart maps with youth to learn more about their supportive adults. Help youth stay connected to supportive adults even when they're not placement options by creating opportunities for regular phone calls, visits, or other contact.

This strategy in action

Wisconsin has developed suggested questions for talking to youth about their connections.

Indiana is piloting a practice of child welfare workers asking about a youth's kin connections they call the placement desk.

New Mexico increased initial kinship placements significantly in 1 year by shifting to practices that focus on the youth. This includes asking about their supportive connections.

Rhode Island set up Zoom meetings during the COVID-19 pandemic with each group home facility and met with each youth 1-on-1 to discuss their placement options. They successfully moved many youth from group homes into kin placements.

Fairfax County, Virginia conducts family finding for youth annually and at every placement change.

Resources

file-pdf icon Heart map template

Youth can diagram people important to them to help identify and maintain connections.

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link icon Wisconsin kin engagement training tools

Standards, processes, and talking points to help identify and maintain youths’ most trusted connections.

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