Research Centers and Institutes
Center for Improvement of Child and Family Services (Child Welfare Partnership)
1600 SW 4th Ave., 4th floor
503-725-5022
Katharine Cahn, Executive Director
The Center for Improvement of Child and Family Services builds the capacity of human service organizations and systems to improve the equity and effectiveness of services and community supports for children, youth, and families. We:
• Build the workforce through training, education, coaching, and mentoring
• Inform and advance systems change through convening, collaborating, and consultation
• Ground our work with research, knowledge partnerships, and program evaluation.
The Center was founded in 1994 as the Child Welfare Partnership (CWP). This partnership continues today, as a collaboration with the Oregon Department of Human Services (DHS) that offers training, research and social work education to improve Oregon's child welfare system. The CWP training program, located in Salem, prepares all new child welfare workers, supervisors, caregivers, and advanced staff using state of the art adult education approaches (including a simulation lab). All offerings are evaluated for quality assurance and measurement of impact. The Child Welfare Partnership's Education Program (CWEP) provides financial support and customized professional education for bachelor and master's level social work students committed to careers in child welfare and includes an evaluation of program impact. This program includes the Culturally Responsive Leaders program, designed to prepare child welfare leaders to serve the growing diversity of child welfare clients. The Child Welfare Partnership's Research team studies the impact of an evolving range of family engagement practices in child welfare, and conducts independently funded research and evaluation to support child welfare reform in partnership with Oregon Child Welfare.
The Center’s System of Care Institute (SOCI) offers training, technical assistance and consultation using a community based, culturally responsive and family and youth-driven care lens. Currently SOCI is supporting the full implementation of Wraparound and System of Care across the state of Oregon and focusing on cross-system collaboration. The System of Care Institute also works in other states and tribes as requested, to promote System of Care, improvement of child-serving systems, and sustainable workforce development.
The Center’s Early Childhood and Family Support Research Team works on a robust research agenda related to early childhood, child abuse prevention, family support and child welfare. This team provides program evaluation and community capacity building research across Oregon and nationally to promote family engagement, and advance best practices in early childhood support and education. A full menu of research projects is available on the CCF website.
For further information about all programs and projects, visit the Center website at http://www.pdx.edu/ccf/
Regional Research Institute for Human Services
1600 SW 4th Ave., Suite 900
503-725-4040
Mary Oschwald, Director
The Regional Research Institute for Human Services (RRI) was established in 1972 by the School of Social Work at Portland State University with a grant from the Social and Rehabilitation Service within the office of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW). The aim of the RRI is to improve the manner in which social services and service delivery systems are designed, managed, and evaluated. To inform social change initiatives, the RRI is prepared to examine all aspects of the complex process by which human service policies and services are developed and implemented. By bringing a range of consumers, family members, and researchers into its activities, the RRI creates new approaches to old problems. It strives to set high standards for applied social research and to provide a research environment for graduate training.
The RRI has undertaken more than 250 projects, many of them national in scope, in fields of child and adult mental health, family and child welfare, child care, employment, juvenile justice, alcohol and drug services, disability, and interpersonal violence. RRI projects range from large, multi-site federally funded grants, to research contracts with state and local governments, to program evaluations in collaboration with local community partners. The RRI is particularly well known for its innovative approaches in consumer-driven and community-engaged research. Over the last five years, total research expenditures for RRI projects have exceeded $32 million.
The RRI is home to several centers with national scope and influence. Since 1984, when the Research and Training Center on Family Support and Children’s Mental Health was initiated, the RRI has been a leader in the field of mental health research and education. The current Pathways to Positive Futures Research and Training Center continues the tradition with a focus on transition-aged youth. The RRI also hosts Trauma Informed Oregon (TIO), which serves as a centralized source of information and resources, and coordinates and provides training for healthcare and related systems. Since 2000, the national program office of Reclaiming Futures: Public Health, Justice, Equity, has been located in the RRI and promotes new standards of care in juvenile justice for young people with drug and alcohol problems, and its model for system change has been implemented in jurisdictions around the country.
For more information about RRI faculty, research projects, and publications, see https://www.pdx.edu/regional-research-institute/