Deck 14: Juvenile Corrections

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Question
Which of the following is NOT a form of community-based corrections?

A) probation
B) training school
C) aftercare
D) residential treatment
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Question
________ requires that the probation officer make certain that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.

A) Surveillance
B) Restitution
C) Foster care
D) Remote location monitoring
Question
A ________ report is a written report of a juvenile's social background that probation officers prepare for a juvenile judge to assist the court in making a disposition of a youth who has been ruled delinquent.

A) book
B) delinquency
C) police
D) social history
Question
Which of the following is NOT a function of juvenile probation?

A) supervision
B) investigation
C) intake
D) youth assignment to institutional placements
Question
During the intake stage of court proceedings, the probation officer ________.

A) prepares a social history report on the youth
B) makes certain that probationers comply with the conditions of probation
C) determines what to do with the case.
D) conducts a fact-finding study on the youth
Question
________ involves the use of electronic equipment to verify that an offender is at home or in a community correctional center during specified hours or to track his or her whereabouts.

A) Surveillance
B) Restitution
C) Foster care
D) Remote location monitoring
Question
Which of the following integrates the central components of strain, control, and social learning theories to reduce recidivism rates?

A) intensive supervision programs
B) aggression replacement training
C) family-integrated transitions
D) multi-systemic therapy
Question
________ is the court-ordered repayment to the victim; often used together with community service as a condition of juvenile probation.

A) Surveillance
B) Restitution
C) Foster care
D) Remote location monitoring
Question
The term ________ refers to the use of unpaid adult community members to assist probation officers in a variety of ways.

A) volunteer program
B) residential social system
C) right to treatment
D) interstate compact
Question
________ refers to a home setting for juveniles who are lawfully removed from their birth parents' homes.

A) Surveillance
B) Restitution
C) Foster care
D) Remote location monitoring
Question
Group homes fulfill the purpose(s) of ________.

A) providing an alternative to institutionalization
B) serving as a short-term community placement, wherein probation and aftercare officers can deal with youths' community problems
C) serving as a "halfway-in" setting for youths having difficulty adjusting to probation and as a "halfway-out" placement for delinquents who are returning to the community but lack an adequate home placement
D) All of the above
Question
A residential setting for adjudicated delinquents, usually those who need a period of readjustment to the community following institutional confinement, is known as ________.

A) a day-treatment center
B) house arrest
C) a group home
D) Outward Bound
Question
Day-treatment programs are popular because ________.

A) counselors get more time to spend with probationers
B) officers can handle probationers with more ease
C) they are more economical
D) they do not involve rigorous workloads for probationers
Question
The rate of juvenile detention in 2013 was ________ youths per every 100,000 in the American population.

A) 103
B) 123
C) 153
D) 173
Question
A ________ is a military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.

A) forestry camp
B) boot camp
C) reception and diagnostic center
D) ranch
Question
A ________ is a facility where juveniles who have been committed to correctional institutions frequently are first sent. This type of center diagnoses youths' problems and develops individualized treatment plans.

A) forestry camp
B) boot camp
C) reception and diagnostic center
D) ranch
Question
A ________ is a correctional facility where residents usually do conservation work in state parks, including cleaning, cutting grass and weeds, and doing general maintenance.

A) forestry camp
B) boot camp
C) reception and diagnostic center
D) ranch
Question
The term ________ refers to the social hierarchy that is established by residents in an institution.

A) volunteer program
B) residential social system
C) right to treatment
D) interstate compact
Question
The term ________ refers to the entitlement of a juvenile who has been committed to a training school to receive any needed services.

A) volunteer program
B) residential social system
C) right to treatment
D) interstate compact
Question
________ led to a wave of litigation in the latter decades of the twentieth century.

A) Deteriorating conditions in juvenile correctional facilities, including the overcrowded living conditions
B) The frequent assaults among residents and against staff
C) The growing presence of gang youths
D) All of the above
Question
Juvenile ________ refers to the supervision of juveniles who are released from correctional institutions so that they can make an optimal adjustment to community living.

A) probation
B) training school
C) aftercare
D) residential treatment
Question
The term ________ refers to the procedure for transferring a youth on probation or aftercare/parole from one state to another.

A) volunteer program
B) residential social system
C) right to treatment
D) interstate compact
Question
The ________ of aftercare involves the cancellation of parole and return of the offender to an institution. It takes effect if a juvenile on aftercare commits another offense or violates the conditions of parole.

A) maintenance
B) retaining
C) upholding
D) revocation
Question
A ________ is a public or private juvenile correctional institution that is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.

A) forestry camp
B) boot camp
C) reception and diagnostic center
D) ranch
Question
Investigation requires that probation officers prepare a social history report on a youth ruled delinquent to aid the judge in making the correct disposition.
Question
Supervision includes surveillance, casework services, and counseling or guidance.
Question
A social history report is ordered by a sheriff or police chief when a youth is found delinquent at the fact-finding stage of investigation.
Question
Those under house arrest are not allowed to leave during the day for doctors' appointments, school, employment, or even religious services.
Question
Surveillance requires that the probation officer make certain that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
Question
The main goals of restitution and community service programs are to hold youthful offenders responsible for their crimes.
Question
Outward Bound is the most widely used wilderness program.
Question
A Homeward Bound school, opened in 1970 in Massachusetts, was the first wilderness program school in the United States.
Question
The purpose of reception and diagnostic centers, which are managed and operated by either public or private agencies, is to determine which treatment plan suits each adjudicated youth and which training school is the best placement.
Question
A forestry camp is a military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.
Question
A boot camp is a public or private juvenile correctional institution that is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.
Question
Parole, or juvenile aftercare, as it is usually called, is concerned with the release of a youth from an institution when he or she can best benefit from release and can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
Question
An interstate compact is sometimes initiated when a youth has no acceptable home placement within his or her own state.
Question
For policymakers, one of the least serious issues related to juvenile institutionalization is providing for the safety of residents.
Question
The basic forms of community-based ________ are probation, residential and day-treatment programs, and aftercare.
Question
House arrest/home confinement is a punishment whereby youths are ordered to remain ________ in their own residences during evening hours, after curfew, and on weekends.
Question
________ requires that the probation officer make certain that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
Question
In ________ programs youngsters spend each day in the program and then return home in the evenings.
Question
Outward Bound is the most widely used ________ program. Its main goal is to use the overcoming of a seemingly impossible task to gain self-reliance, to prove one's worth, and to define one's personhood.
Question
The social hierarchy that is established by residents in an institution is referred to as the ________ social system.
Question
________, or juvenile aftercare, as it is usually called, is concerned with the release of a youth from an institution when he or she can best benefit from release and can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
Question
Right to ________ refers to the entitlement of a juvenile who has been committed to a training school to receive any needed services (for example, therapy, education).
Question
Once a youth is adjudicated to a state training school, the state normally retains ________ until his or her release.
Question
A(n) ________ compact is sometimes initiated when a youth has no acceptable home placement within his or her own state.
Question
Upon receiving an allegation of ________ abuse, the head of the juvenile facility must report the allegation to the head of the juvenile agency, the juvenile court that adjudicated the victim's case, and the parents or guardians of the victims (in most cases).
Question
Match each type of available institutional placement with its description.

-Reception and diagnostic center

A) This type of center diagnoses youths' problems and develops individualized treatment plans.
B) A military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.
C) A public or private juvenile correctional institution that, like a forestry camp, is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.
D) A correctional facility where residents usually do conservation work in state parks, including cleaning, cutting grass and weeds, and doing general maintenance.
Question
Match each type of available institutional placement with its description.

-Forestry camp

A) This type of center diagnoses youths' problems and develops individualized treatment plans.
B) A military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.
C) A public or private juvenile correctional institution that, like a forestry camp, is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.
D) A correctional facility where residents usually do conservation work in state parks, including cleaning, cutting grass and weeds, and doing general maintenance.
Question
Match each type of available institutional placement with its description.

-Ranch

A) This type of center diagnoses youths' problems and develops individualized treatment plans.
B) A military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.
C) A public or private juvenile correctional institution that, like a forestry camp, is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.
D) A correctional facility where residents usually do conservation work in state parks, including cleaning, cutting grass and weeds, and doing general maintenance.
Question
Match each type of available institutional placement with its description.

-Boot camp

A) This type of center diagnoses youths' problems and develops individualized treatment plans.
B) A military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.
C) A public or private juvenile correctional institution that, like a forestry camp, is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.
D) A correctional facility where residents usually do conservation work in state parks, including cleaning, cutting grass and weeds, and doing general maintenance.
Question
Match each term or concept with its description.

-Surveillance

A) The court-ordered repayment to the victim; often used together with community service as a condition of juvenile probation.
B) The observation of probationers by probation officers, intended to ensure that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
C) The procedure for transferring a youth on probation or aftercare/parole from one state to another.
D) The supervision of juveniles who are released from correctional institutions so that they can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
Question
Match each term or concept with its description.

-Restitution

A) The court-ordered repayment to the victim; often used together with community service as a condition of juvenile probation.
B) The observation of probationers by probation officers, intended to ensure that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
C) The procedure for transferring a youth on probation or aftercare/parole from one state to another.
D) The supervision of juveniles who are released from correctional institutions so that they can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
Question
Match each term or concept with its description.

-Interstate compact

A) The court-ordered repayment to the victim; often used together with community service as a condition of juvenile probation.
B) The observation of probationers by probation officers, intended to ensure that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
C) The procedure for transferring a youth on probation or aftercare/parole from one state to another.
D) The supervision of juveniles who are released from correctional institutions so that they can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
Question
Match each term or concept with its description.

-Juvenile aftercare

A) The court-ordered repayment to the victim; often used together with community service as a condition of juvenile probation.
B) The observation of probationers by probation officers, intended to ensure that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
C) The procedure for transferring a youth on probation or aftercare/parole from one state to another.
D) The supervision of juveniles who are released from correctional institutions so that they can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
Question
What are basic functions of juvenile probation?
Question
Discuss the goals of house arrest and remote location monitoring.
Question
Discuss the role played by volunteers in probation programs.
Question
How do residential facilities help juvenile offenders reform?
Question
Elucidate various points to improve the effectiveness of community-based programs.
Question
What are the differences between residential and day treatment programs and institutional placements that are available to juveniles?
Question
There is sufficient evidence to support the belief that institutionalization has a questionable impact on residents and may even contribute to high rates of recidivism. Why do you think this is? Please explain.
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Deck 14: Juvenile Corrections
1
Which of the following is NOT a form of community-based corrections?

A) probation
B) training school
C) aftercare
D) residential treatment
training school
2
________ requires that the probation officer make certain that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.

A) Surveillance
B) Restitution
C) Foster care
D) Remote location monitoring
Surveillance
3
A ________ report is a written report of a juvenile's social background that probation officers prepare for a juvenile judge to assist the court in making a disposition of a youth who has been ruled delinquent.

A) book
B) delinquency
C) police
D) social history
social history
4
Which of the following is NOT a function of juvenile probation?

A) supervision
B) investigation
C) intake
D) youth assignment to institutional placements
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k this deck
5
During the intake stage of court proceedings, the probation officer ________.

A) prepares a social history report on the youth
B) makes certain that probationers comply with the conditions of probation
C) determines what to do with the case.
D) conducts a fact-finding study on the youth
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
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6
________ involves the use of electronic equipment to verify that an offender is at home or in a community correctional center during specified hours or to track his or her whereabouts.

A) Surveillance
B) Restitution
C) Foster care
D) Remote location monitoring
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which of the following integrates the central components of strain, control, and social learning theories to reduce recidivism rates?

A) intensive supervision programs
B) aggression replacement training
C) family-integrated transitions
D) multi-systemic therapy
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
8
________ is the court-ordered repayment to the victim; often used together with community service as a condition of juvenile probation.

A) Surveillance
B) Restitution
C) Foster care
D) Remote location monitoring
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The term ________ refers to the use of unpaid adult community members to assist probation officers in a variety of ways.

A) volunteer program
B) residential social system
C) right to treatment
D) interstate compact
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
________ refers to a home setting for juveniles who are lawfully removed from their birth parents' homes.

A) Surveillance
B) Restitution
C) Foster care
D) Remote location monitoring
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Group homes fulfill the purpose(s) of ________.

A) providing an alternative to institutionalization
B) serving as a short-term community placement, wherein probation and aftercare officers can deal with youths' community problems
C) serving as a "halfway-in" setting for youths having difficulty adjusting to probation and as a "halfway-out" placement for delinquents who are returning to the community but lack an adequate home placement
D) All of the above
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
12
A residential setting for adjudicated delinquents, usually those who need a period of readjustment to the community following institutional confinement, is known as ________.

A) a day-treatment center
B) house arrest
C) a group home
D) Outward Bound
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Day-treatment programs are popular because ________.

A) counselors get more time to spend with probationers
B) officers can handle probationers with more ease
C) they are more economical
D) they do not involve rigorous workloads for probationers
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
14
The rate of juvenile detention in 2013 was ________ youths per every 100,000 in the American population.

A) 103
B) 123
C) 153
D) 173
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k this deck
15
A ________ is a military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.

A) forestry camp
B) boot camp
C) reception and diagnostic center
D) ranch
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
A ________ is a facility where juveniles who have been committed to correctional institutions frequently are first sent. This type of center diagnoses youths' problems and develops individualized treatment plans.

A) forestry camp
B) boot camp
C) reception and diagnostic center
D) ranch
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k this deck
17
A ________ is a correctional facility where residents usually do conservation work in state parks, including cleaning, cutting grass and weeds, and doing general maintenance.

A) forestry camp
B) boot camp
C) reception and diagnostic center
D) ranch
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The term ________ refers to the social hierarchy that is established by residents in an institution.

A) volunteer program
B) residential social system
C) right to treatment
D) interstate compact
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k this deck
19
The term ________ refers to the entitlement of a juvenile who has been committed to a training school to receive any needed services.

A) volunteer program
B) residential social system
C) right to treatment
D) interstate compact
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
________ led to a wave of litigation in the latter decades of the twentieth century.

A) Deteriorating conditions in juvenile correctional facilities, including the overcrowded living conditions
B) The frequent assaults among residents and against staff
C) The growing presence of gang youths
D) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Juvenile ________ refers to the supervision of juveniles who are released from correctional institutions so that they can make an optimal adjustment to community living.

A) probation
B) training school
C) aftercare
D) residential treatment
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k this deck
22
The term ________ refers to the procedure for transferring a youth on probation or aftercare/parole from one state to another.

A) volunteer program
B) residential social system
C) right to treatment
D) interstate compact
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k this deck
23
The ________ of aftercare involves the cancellation of parole and return of the offender to an institution. It takes effect if a juvenile on aftercare commits another offense or violates the conditions of parole.

A) maintenance
B) retaining
C) upholding
D) revocation
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k this deck
24
A ________ is a public or private juvenile correctional institution that is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.

A) forestry camp
B) boot camp
C) reception and diagnostic center
D) ranch
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k this deck
25
Investigation requires that probation officers prepare a social history report on a youth ruled delinquent to aid the judge in making the correct disposition.
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k this deck
26
Supervision includes surveillance, casework services, and counseling or guidance.
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k this deck
27
A social history report is ordered by a sheriff or police chief when a youth is found delinquent at the fact-finding stage of investigation.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Those under house arrest are not allowed to leave during the day for doctors' appointments, school, employment, or even religious services.
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k this deck
29
Surveillance requires that the probation officer make certain that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
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k this deck
30
The main goals of restitution and community service programs are to hold youthful offenders responsible for their crimes.
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k this deck
31
Outward Bound is the most widely used wilderness program.
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k this deck
32
A Homeward Bound school, opened in 1970 in Massachusetts, was the first wilderness program school in the United States.
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The purpose of reception and diagnostic centers, which are managed and operated by either public or private agencies, is to determine which treatment plan suits each adjudicated youth and which training school is the best placement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
A forestry camp is a military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.
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k this deck
35
A boot camp is a public or private juvenile correctional institution that is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.
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k this deck
36
Parole, or juvenile aftercare, as it is usually called, is concerned with the release of a youth from an institution when he or she can best benefit from release and can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
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k this deck
37
An interstate compact is sometimes initiated when a youth has no acceptable home placement within his or her own state.
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k this deck
38
For policymakers, one of the least serious issues related to juvenile institutionalization is providing for the safety of residents.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
The basic forms of community-based ________ are probation, residential and day-treatment programs, and aftercare.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
House arrest/home confinement is a punishment whereby youths are ordered to remain ________ in their own residences during evening hours, after curfew, and on weekends.
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k this deck
41
________ requires that the probation officer make certain that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
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k this deck
42
In ________ programs youngsters spend each day in the program and then return home in the evenings.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Outward Bound is the most widely used ________ program. Its main goal is to use the overcoming of a seemingly impossible task to gain self-reliance, to prove one's worth, and to define one's personhood.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
The social hierarchy that is established by residents in an institution is referred to as the ________ social system.
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k this deck
45
________, or juvenile aftercare, as it is usually called, is concerned with the release of a youth from an institution when he or she can best benefit from release and can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Right to ________ refers to the entitlement of a juvenile who has been committed to a training school to receive any needed services (for example, therapy, education).
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Once a youth is adjudicated to a state training school, the state normally retains ________ until his or her release.
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k this deck
48
A(n) ________ compact is sometimes initiated when a youth has no acceptable home placement within his or her own state.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Upon receiving an allegation of ________ abuse, the head of the juvenile facility must report the allegation to the head of the juvenile agency, the juvenile court that adjudicated the victim's case, and the parents or guardians of the victims (in most cases).
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
50
Match each type of available institutional placement with its description.

-Reception and diagnostic center

A) This type of center diagnoses youths' problems and develops individualized treatment plans.
B) A military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.
C) A public or private juvenile correctional institution that, like a forestry camp, is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.
D) A correctional facility where residents usually do conservation work in state parks, including cleaning, cutting grass and weeds, and doing general maintenance.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Match each type of available institutional placement with its description.

-Forestry camp

A) This type of center diagnoses youths' problems and develops individualized treatment plans.
B) A military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.
C) A public or private juvenile correctional institution that, like a forestry camp, is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.
D) A correctional facility where residents usually do conservation work in state parks, including cleaning, cutting grass and weeds, and doing general maintenance.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Match each type of available institutional placement with its description.

-Ranch

A) This type of center diagnoses youths' problems and develops individualized treatment plans.
B) A military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.
C) A public or private juvenile correctional institution that, like a forestry camp, is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.
D) A correctional facility where residents usually do conservation work in state parks, including cleaning, cutting grass and weeds, and doing general maintenance.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
Match each type of available institutional placement with its description.

-Boot camp

A) This type of center diagnoses youths' problems and develops individualized treatment plans.
B) A military-style facility used as an alternative to prison in order to deal with prison crowding and public demands for severe punishment.
C) A public or private juvenile correctional institution that, like a forestry camp, is usually less secure than a training school and that has a more normal atmosphere.
D) A correctional facility where residents usually do conservation work in state parks, including cleaning, cutting grass and weeds, and doing general maintenance.
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Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
Match each term or concept with its description.

-Surveillance

A) The court-ordered repayment to the victim; often used together with community service as a condition of juvenile probation.
B) The observation of probationers by probation officers, intended to ensure that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
C) The procedure for transferring a youth on probation or aftercare/parole from one state to another.
D) The supervision of juveniles who are released from correctional institutions so that they can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Match each term or concept with its description.

-Restitution

A) The court-ordered repayment to the victim; often used together with community service as a condition of juvenile probation.
B) The observation of probationers by probation officers, intended to ensure that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
C) The procedure for transferring a youth on probation or aftercare/parole from one state to another.
D) The supervision of juveniles who are released from correctional institutions so that they can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
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56
Match each term or concept with its description.

-Interstate compact

A) The court-ordered repayment to the victim; often used together with community service as a condition of juvenile probation.
B) The observation of probationers by probation officers, intended to ensure that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
C) The procedure for transferring a youth on probation or aftercare/parole from one state to another.
D) The supervision of juveniles who are released from correctional institutions so that they can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
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57
Match each term or concept with its description.

-Juvenile aftercare

A) The court-ordered repayment to the victim; often used together with community service as a condition of juvenile probation.
B) The observation of probationers by probation officers, intended to ensure that probationers comply with the conditions of probation and that they do not break the law.
C) The procedure for transferring a youth on probation or aftercare/parole from one state to another.
D) The supervision of juveniles who are released from correctional institutions so that they can make an optimal adjustment to community living.
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58
What are basic functions of juvenile probation?
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59
Discuss the goals of house arrest and remote location monitoring.
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60
Discuss the role played by volunteers in probation programs.
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61
How do residential facilities help juvenile offenders reform?
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62
Elucidate various points to improve the effectiveness of community-based programs.
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63
What are the differences between residential and day treatment programs and institutional placements that are available to juveniles?
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64
There is sufficient evidence to support the belief that institutionalization has a questionable impact on residents and may even contribute to high rates of recidivism. Why do you think this is? Please explain.
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