The Culture of Generational Poverty
Presented by
Lance J. Parks, LCSW
8 CE Credits/Contact Hours
Price: $40
Instructions
How to get your certificate of completion:
- On the left column, click on 'Download the Course.' [ ]
- It would be helpful to 'print the test' to fill out as you read the course.
- After reading the course, click on the link to 'Take Test'
- If you have not already registered and logged in you will be prompted to do so.
- After passing the test, fill out the Course Evaluation, choose the method of payment then click submit (We accept PayPal, most major credit cards and echecks). You will then be taken to the payment page.
- After submitting payment, you will be able to print your certificate of completion on your member account page.
Test results of courses passed, receipts, and certificates of CE credit, are kept on your member account page for you to retrieve as needed.
Board and Agency Approvals
SpeedyCeus.com, provider #1613, is approved to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Organizations, not individual courses, are approved as ACE providers. State and provincial regulatory boards have the final authority to determine whether an individual course may be accepted for continuing education credit. SpeedyCeus.com maintains responsibility for this course. ACE provider approval period: (12/15/21 to 12/15/24). Social Workers completing this course receive 8 continuing education credits.
CALIFORNIA: This program meets the requirements for the California Board of Behavioral Sciences for 8 hours of CE Credit
TEXAS: This course meets the criteria for acceptable continuing education as defined by the Texas State Boards of Professional Counselors, Marriage and Family Therapists and Social Workers for 8 hours of CE Credit.
This program is approved for 8 continuing education credits/contact hours by:
- The California Board of Registered Nursing # CEP 14462
- The National Board for Certified Counselors # 6412
- The Florida Board of Clinical Social Work, Marriage and Family Therapy and Mental Health Counseling #50-14000
It is the responsibility of the participant to check with their board regarding specific CE requirements.
CE Course Description
As shown in this course, over the years poverty and homelessness has grown extensively. The contributors of poverty are wide and varied, and the debates about the causes are just as far and ranging. Poverty and homelessness is often generational, and has created its own culture. Additionally, increased mental illness and substance abuse have contributed to worsening the issue in higher numbers.
The course included the trends, the contributors, the politics, and the behavioral interventions surrounding homelessness.
This course is an online, non-interactive, reading based, self-paced, and asynchronous course.
If you have questions about the course, require accessibility accommodations or need assistance, please email info@speedyceus.com or call (909) 628-4216.
CE Learning Objectives
At the completion of the course on Culture of Generational Poverty, the participant will be able to:
- Describe poverty and determine its extent in the United States, causes and the politics behind it
- Explain the culture of poverty
- Inspect the three major economic classes in the United States and compare their views towards each other, their past, present possibilities and future potential.
- Define treatment improvement protocol (TIP) being regarded in this course.
- Recognize the underlying myths regarding homelessness .
- Determine the stages of homelessness rehabilitation
- Employ the vignettes of homelessness intervention to be more effective in treating people who are in different stages of homelessness rehabilitation.
CE Course Outline
Target Audiences: A Social Workers, Marriage and Family Therapists, Professional Counselors and Nurses Content level: A Intermediate
- Chapter 1 :Trends and Politics
- Poverty in the United States
- The Politics of Poverty
- Chapter 2: The Culture of Generational Poverty: Providing Meaningful Help to the Impoverished
- Double Jeopardy: Poor and at Risk
- Past, Present and Future Perspectives
- Life in the Neighborhood
- It’s a Crime
- Welfare, Working Poor & the Homeless
- How Do Communities Respond to Homelessness?
- Common sense is not all that common
- Overcoming obstacles to helping
- Chapter 3: Poverty, Homelessness and Mental Illness
- Introduction
- Why Address Homelessness in Substance Abuse and Mental Health Programs?
- Recommendations of the consensus Panel
- Homelessness in America
- What factors contribute to homelessness?
- Chapter 4: Homelessness and Behavioral Health Services
- The special rewards of working with People who are homeless
- Counselor competencies for working with people who are homeless
- The impact of Homelessness on Children and Families
- Stages of Change, Recovery, and Rehabilitation
- Clinical Interventions and Strategies for serving People who are homeless
- Family services to reduce the risk of intergenerational problems
- Chapter 5: Vignettes of Homelessness Intervention
- Vignette 1- Juan (Outreach of Engagement Phase of Homelessness Rehabilitation)
- Vignette 2- Francis (Outreach and Engagement Phase of homelessness rehabilitation)
- Vignette 3- Roxanne (Intensive Care Phase of Homelessness Rehabilitation)
- Housing first models
- How to Engage people who are living on the street
Course Development
Course topics are chosen based on various board requirements and professionals needs. Licensed professionals oversee, compile and develop course materials, posttest, and other course materials, determine the level of difficulty, and ensure course content is appropriate. The course developer bio is available here.
Course Update May 2021
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