To achieve its goals of preventing maltreatment, improving reporting rates, and providing the best care for children who have experienced abuse, the CPC — founded in December 2011 — is collaborating with Penn State information technology (IT) staff to build new digital assets.
Last year, the CPC reached out to the instructional designers in Teaching and Learning with Technology, a unit within Information Technology Services (ITS) at University Park, for support in designing a new e-learning program aimed at early childhood professionals throughout Pennsylvania called iLook Out for Child Abuse.
“Children ages birth through 4 are the most vulnerable to abuse,” Levi said. “And yet of the more than 26,000 reports of suspected abuse made in Pennsylvania last year, only 451 came from early childhood professionals — which suggests that many cases are being missed. iLook Out for Child Abuse focuses on early childhood professionals so that child care providers can be both informed and prepared to report maltreatment when there is ‘reasonable suspicion’ that a child may be being abused or neglected.”
The online training will consist of multimedia, interactive modules to help individuals identify risk factors and signs of abuse. The program will be available online through a learning management system and will be free.
It will also point users to the newly enhanced Pennsylvania Look Out for Child Abuse form, an online resource at www.reportsuspectedabuse.com for reporting suspected maltreatment of children. This innovative tool is designed to increase the efficiency and accuracy of information transfer to secure state databases. Eventually, it will be used to research reporting practices, using de-identified data, and to help improve standards for what is reported, how it is reported and how that information is processed.
John Soubik said this kind of improved communication is key in every step of the reporting and evaluation process. Soubik, a former county child welfare investigator and 1985 Penn State alumnus, presented the annual de Lissovoy lecture on child welfare at the University in October.
“It’s so important that people communicate at every step of an investigation,” Soubik said. “Reporting has to be accurate and meticulous notes have to be kept at every step. When I was an investigator, there was no centralized database and information could be easily lost. The new repository will be extremely helpful.”