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Field Implementation Support Specialist - School of Social Work, Field Implementation Support P...

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Field Implementation Support Specialist

School of Social Work

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is seeking dynamic professionals to join a partnership between public university social work programs and Field Implementation Support Program (FISP).

As a member of a specialized Statewide Field Support Team, the Field Implementation Support Specialist will work collaboratively with agency partners to provide training, coaching, mentoring and professional development to agency staff, supervisors, and managers. Provide both introductory awareness and post-training content reinforcement/support in the application of Family Centered, Trauma-informed and Strength based practices, as well as other key Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (IDCFS) initiatives. Facilitate and at times develop training, learning groups, and coaching for agency leadership (supervisors and managers) in content related to leadership and supervisory skills. Provide field support to enhance the transfer of learning from the training classroom to field operations.

The University of Illinois is an Equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action employer. Minorities, women, veterans, and individuals with disabilities are encouraged to apply. For more information, visit http://go.illinois.edu/EEO.

Duties and Responsibilities:

  • 55% - Specialist will demonstrate an understanding of the Illinois Core Practice Model, agency policy and procedures, child welfare practices, learning methodologies, coaching techniques and implementation sciences. Specialist will partner with staff, supervisors, managers, agency leadership and key stakeholders they are assigned. Field support will be inclusive of conducting regular and frequent face-to-face meetings with individuals and small cohorts within but not limited to a field office, agency or client residence. Field support will include assessing local team strengths and challenges, and other surveys to assess practice strengths and gaps. Multiple methodologies will be utilized to accomplish this including observations of practice to identify individual and team needs and development of a practice application plan aimed at organizational outcome improvement.
  • 25% - Specialist will complete gap analysis for agency workers, supervisors, and managers, to assess areas of strength or challenges related to child welfare practice, and develop and implement a plan to build from the strengths to address the identified challenges. Specialist will train, coach, mentor and professionally develop agency leadership staff who through individual coaching, group learning, and formal training on leadership and supervisory skills. Specialist will facilitate training of trainers which is inclusive of coordinating and preparation of the delivery of the training and curriculum. Specialist will train staff on the delivery of various curriculums, activities, facilitation styles, presentation and classroom management skills. Specialist will spearhead workgroups and special projects as assigned which would be inclusive of attending and coordinating various meetings, drafting and disseminating notes/reports and reporting out to staff and management. Specialist will work in close collaboration with the Field Support Program Manager in the performance and assignment of these duties to be inclusive of curriculum development, revisions and enhancements.
  • 10% - Appropriately applies programmatic frameworks, self-reflection tools, action plans, and protocols to assess each respective supervisor and manager (areas may include but are not limited to: knowledge, skills, attitude, systems and operations management, practice and clinical application, training skills, coaching skills, agency and community leadership); assist direct service supervisors and middle managers with incorporating job competencies into the agency’s practice programs; supports skill development in: independent and self-directed learning, critical thinking, problem identification, analysis and options problem resolution, goal setting, action planning, and decision making; support skill development in the following organizational leadership techniques: change management, program management, performance standards, gap analysis, data collection and analysis, client and service survey analysis, and quality assurance with respect to the integration of agency practice models; and promotes the supervisor and program manager partnership with treatment specialists, social service providers, court members, community contributors, and supporters; reports problematic case issues and critical case data that impact job performance.
  • 5% - Meet job and performance expectations as outlined by the annual program plan deliverables unless otherwise modified by the IDCFS; communicates appropriately with the Program Administration, Program Management and as directed with supervisors and middle managers in order to complete the practice application and field support gap analysis; meet with the Program Management and Program Administration to review and discuss all of their activities and strategic program implementation planning; reviews pertinent information and ongoing progress with the Field Support Program Manager and seek consultation for performance improvement issues; and inform the Field Support Program Manager of all activities occurring on assigned work. Complete required assignments and feedback reports: gap analysis, maintains progress notes, field surveys, and needs assessments; authors and submits regular reports; assists with data collection, entry, and analysis of all assigned instructional research as requested and submit a monthly activity report.
  • 5% - Utilization of the assigned IDCFS equipment (laptop, copy, scan, and fax machines, LCD projectors, phones, conference lines, and webinar) and software programs Microsoft Office products, Share Point and D-Net appropriately and with proficiency as directed and required. As required, utilize various training functions of the Office of Professional Development, Parent and Caregiver Support under the Clinical Practice and professional Development; Virtual Training Center on-line learning management system; participates in various Office, Division, and IDCFS meetings and training conferences as assigned; and other related duties to further the mission of the unit as assigned.

Minimum Requirements: Master’s degree from an accredited college or university with course work in Social Work or other recognized professional degree in human services. Professional experience of seven (7) or more years in Illinois public-sponsored, agency-based child welfare setting within IDCFS or its private sector partner agencies, providing a combination of direct child welfare casework including Intake, Intact Family Services, Permanency/Foster Care and Investigations. Four of those years must include responsibility for supervision of child welfare direct service staff and/or management of child welfare services. Experience with applying learning methodologies, such as coaching, transfer of learning, group facilitation, training and curriculum development. Appropriate state license as a Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) or Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor (LCPC) either prior to starting the position or demonstrate the intent to acquire the clinical license within twelve months of beginning in the position.

Knowledge Requirements: Qualified applicants must possess a working knowledge of organizational change management strategies, established training, coaching and transfer of learning methodologies, case study and clinical case presentation methodologies, established evidence-informed child welfare practices and clinical interventions related to trauma and child maltreatment within family systems, the impact of trauma on the child and family system, child trauma treatment practices, child and adolescent development, issues related to diagnosis and co-morbidity, and other behavioral health issues.

This is a full-time (100%), twelve month non-tenure track academic professional position located throughout the state of Illinois. The position is grant-funded and renewal is contingent upon availability of funds. Salary is competitive and commensurate with qualifications. The proposed start date is as soon as possible after the closing date. There are multiple positions available. The post will remain open until the positions are filled.

To ensure full consideration complete applications must be submitted by June 1, 2019. Please create your candidate profile at http://jobs.illinois.edu and upload a cover letter, resume, and the name, address, and phone numbers of three references.

For further information regarding application procedures, you may contact sw-hr@illinois.edu. You may also visit http://www.socialwork.illinois.edu for additional information.

The University of Illinois conducts criminal background checks on all job candidates upon acceptance of contingent offer.

College Name or Administrative Unit:School of Social Work Category:5-Education and Student Services Title:Field Implementation Support Specialist - School of Social Work, Field Implementation Support Program (109401) Open Date:03/15/2019 Organization Name:School of Social Work

Organization

Since its founding in 1867, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign has earned a reputation as a world-class leader in research, teaching, and public engagement.

Faculty

A talented and highly respected faculty is the University's most significant resource. Many are recognized for exceptional scholarship with memberships in such organizations as the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences, and the National Academy of Engineering. 

Our faculty have been awarded Nobel Prizes, Pulitzer Prizes, and the Fields Medal in Mathematics.The success of our faculty is matched by that of our alumni: 11 are Nobel laureates and another 18 have won Pulitzer Prizes.

Academic Resources

Academic resources on campus are among the finest in the world. The University Library is one of the largest public university collections in the world with 11 million volumes in its 37 unit libraries. Annually, 53,000,000 people visit its online catalog. Students have access to thousands of computer terminals in classrooms, residence halls, and campus libraries for use in classroom instruction, study, and research.

Research

Students and scholars find the University an ideal place to conduct research. The Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology is a model for interdisciplinary research, where eighteen research groups from sixteen University departments work within and across three broadly defined themes: biological intelligence, human-computer intelligent interaction, and molecular and electronic nanostructures. The University is also home to the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA).

Undergraduate Education

The University has a fundamental commitment to undergraduate education. Nearly 28,000 undergraduate students are enrolled in nine undergraduate divisions, which together offer some 4,000 courses in more than 150 fields of study.

Undergraduate admission is highly selective. In the 2001 freshman class, students in the middle 50% had ACT scores between 25 and 30 and ranked between the 83rd and 96th percentiles of their high school graduating classes.

The University enrolls over 9,000 graduate and professional students in more than 100 disciplines. It is among the top five universities in number of earned doctorates awarded annually in the United States.

Also integral to the University's mission is a commitment to public engagement. Each year about 65,000 Illinois residents participate in scores of conferences, institutes, courses, and workshops presented statewide. Research and class projects take students and professors off campus to share expertise and technical support with Illinois farmers, manufacturing firms, and businesses. In a typical year, student volunteers log more than 60,000 volunteer hours.

The Arts

A major center for the arts, the campus attracts dozens of nationally and internationally renowned artists each year to its widely acclaimed Krannert Center for the Performing Arts. The University also supports two major museums: the Krannert Art Museum and Kinkead Pavilion; and the Spurlock Museum, a museum of world history and culture. 

Other major facilities include the multipurpose Assembly Hall (16,500 seats); Memorial Stadium (70,000 seats), site of Big Ten Conference football games; and the Intramural-Physical Education Building, one of the largest recreational facilities of its kind on a university campus.

Inclusive Illinois, one campus, many voices

Inclusive Illinois is the University’s commitment to cultivating a community at Illinois where everyone is welcomed, celebrated, and respected. Illinois is about how we value difference to make a difference. http://www.inclusiveillinois.illinois.edu/

As evidence of the University’s commitment to enhance the working, living, and learning environment for faculty, staff, and students, the University will encourage a standard of conduct and behavior that is consistent with the values of inclusivity. In an environment of inclusivity, there is no place for acts of hatred, intolerance, insensitivity, bigotry, threats of violence, harassment or discrimination.

Inclusive Illinois, one campus, many voices

Inclusive Illinois is the University’s commitment to cultivating a community at Illinois where everyone is welcomed, celebrated, and respected. Through education, engagement, and excellence, each voice creates the Inclusive Illinois Experience.

How can we appreciate difference to make a difference?

Illinois is the place where we embrace difference. We embrace it because we value it. We value it because we know that we have so much to learn from each other in our living, learning, and working environment.

Illinois is the place where we recognize the power of possibility and where great potential is realized. Inclusive Illinois is the vision of that place: a vision made real by leadership and commitment.

Illinois is the place where consensus is forged by discourse and where everyone’s contributions are recognized: significant contributions that elevate us because they are informed and enhanced by race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation and gender identity, age, physical ability, religion, class, and national origin. We are enriched by these perspectives, and we are united by the very discourse that brings these views together.

It is a process. It is transformative. And we celebrate the remarkable changes we set in motion here … taking an important step … crossing boundaries … starting with our own.

It all starts with each of us: with our willingness to embark on the journey in the search for answers, and with our openness and acceptance of the answers we find. Illinois is the place where it all comes together.

Learn more about how Inclusive Illinois promotes diversity here.

Commitment to Equal Opportunity

The commitment of the University to the most fundamental principles of academic freedom, equality of opportunity, and human dignity requires that decisions involving students and employees be based on individual merit and be free from invidious discrimination in all its forms, whether or not specifically prohibited by law. Among the forms of invidious discrimination prohibited by the University policy but not law is discrimination, including harassment, on the basis of sexual orientation. Complaints of invidious discrimination in violation of University policy are to be resolved within existing University procedures. The policy of the University of Illinois is to comply with all federal and state nondiscrimination, equal opportunity, and affirmative action laws, orders, and regulations. The University will not engage in discrimination or harassment against any person because of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, ancestry, age, marital status, disability, unfavorable discharge from the military, or status as a disabled veteran or a veteran of the Vietnam era. This nondiscrimination policy applies to admissions, employment, and access to and treatment in University programs and activities

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