Exam 5: Alternatives to Confinement
Exam 1: Perspectives on Crime and Punishment27 Questions
Exam 2: The Origins and Evolution of Canadian Corrections26 Questions
Exam 3: Contemporary Canadian Corrections25 Questions
Exam 4: Sentencing: Beginning the Corrections Process22 Questions
Exam 5: Alternatives to Confinement24 Questions
Exam 6: Correctional Institutions25 Questions
Exam 7: Working Inside: The Experience of Correctional Officers25 Questions
Exam 8: Doing Time: The Experience of Inmates23 Questions
Exam 9: Classification, Case Management, and Treatment26 Questions
Exam 10: Release From Incarceration25 Questions
Exam 11: Re-Entry and Life After Prison27 Questions
Exam 12: Women Offenders27 Questions
Exam 13: Indigenous Offenders27 Questions
Exam 14: Young Offenders25 Questions
Exam 15: Creating Effective Systems of Corrections27 Questions
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An offender is released on day parole from an institution in British Columbia that houses offenders serving sentences of less than two years. Who will supervise the parolee in the community?
(Multiple Choice)
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A woman offender is sentenced to a period of probation, and a risk assessment tool reveals that she is at risk to reoffend due to a lack of education and a poor record of employment. What risk assessment tool did the probation officer use to measure her level of risk?
(Multiple Choice)
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What alternative to confinement does a judge impose when an offender is sentenced to an alternative to confinement that requires 18 months of supervision in the community and the conditions of supervision are numerous and difficult, requiring the offender to be under house arrest from 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 a.m.?
(Multiple Choice)
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What has research evidence revealed about the effectiveness of probation?
(Multiple Choice)
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