
Trauma Informed Support and Supervision for those Working with Children at Risk
Implementing the TISS Model in Practice
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Working with at risk children and their families is trauma-laden in nature, making exposure to occupational trauma a professional inevitability. Child protection systems around the world have consistently been found to struggle with providing adequate quality supervision to practitioners within their workforce leading to high rates of practitioner turnover. This book has been written in response to the lack of trauma informed supervision models designed to support practitioners working in trauma-laden environments. It introduces professionals to the TISS (Trauma Informed Support and Supervisio...
Working with at risk children and their families is trauma-laden in nature, making exposure to occupational trauma a professional inevitability. Child protection systems around the world have consistently been found to struggle with providing adequate quality supervision to practitioners within their workforce leading to high rates of practitioner turnover. This book has been written in response to the lack of trauma informed supervision models designed to support practitioners working in trauma-laden environments. It introduces professionals to the TISS (Trauma Informed Support and Supervision) model including all the elements that underpin the framework. Readers will be guided through a series of activities throughout the book preparing them to design and implement their own TISS plan in their own occupational setting. Case-studies and vignettes are included as teaching tools within chapters. Catering to both frontline practitioners and line supervisors and managers, the TISS model normalizes the experience of occupational traumatic stress and offers a preventative model of care and support as well as a guide to support practitioners post exposure. It will be of interest to all professionals who work with at risk children and their families, including social workers, psychologists, nurses, healthcare professionals, teachers and other education professionals, counsellors, youth justice workers, lawyers and paralegals, family support and domestic and family violence practitioners, housing and homelessness workers as well as program delivery professionals.