Engaging Staff to Advance Probation Culture and Practice Consistency with APPA’s, "10 Core Principles of Juvenile Probation"

SESSION INFO

Monday, July 1, 2024
9:15 AM - 10:45 AM
Session Type: Workshop

This is the final of three connected but stand-alone workshops. Participants are encouraged to attend all three but can take any workshop independently without participating in others. This workshop will start with a review of APPA’s 10 core principles for juvenile probation. We will discuss how the adoption of these principles will require that the roles and practices of traditionally applied juvenile probation must shift to align with these principles and how the probation culture must move from a control compliance focus to an assistance oriented and coaching approach. This will be an interactive workshop that will draw from practical scenarios and findings from widely applied probation officer surveys to dig into the implications and adaptations to practice, trainings provided and changes to organizational culture necessary to fully implement the APPA’s vision and 10 core principles.

SESSION PRESENTERS

Travis Johnson
Program Associate, American Probation and Parole Association


American Probation and Parole Association, Lexington, KY Program Associate 2016-present • Conducted on-site training sessions for 9 APPA professional development institutes while also conducting meetings with grant partners • Coordinated with APPA partners and provided logistical support for creation of webinar content at onset of online training institute. Collected community feedback for adaption of subsequent online training programs. • Scheduled and coordinated recordings of virtual training workshops for 3 virtual institutes. • Conducted outreach to qualified trainers to present at APPA institutes • Developed written products (e.g., reports, articles, briefs, research memos, presentations, etc.) for both grants and membership services departments • Obtained new funding opportunities through positive working relationships with government and private agencies, creation of grant proposals and execution of deliverables • Prepared and monitored timelines, budgets, progress reports, and deliverables to ensure that responsibilities to funders are met in assigned project areas • Maintains training record for programs such as Impaired Driver Assessment, Tribal Law and Order Act, and the Tribal Intergovernmental Reentry Workshops.


Scott S. MacDonald
Justice Consultant, Justsolve Inc


Scott MacDonald is the president of Justsolve and consults in the areas of juvenile and criminal justice reform. He is a retired Chief Probation Officer from Santa Cruz County, California and has 40 years of experience in adult and juvenile probation. He works closely with the Annie E. Casey Foundation in the implementation of juvenile justice reforms to transform probation and reduce incarceration and out of home placement. Scott holds a Master of Science Degree in Administration of Justice from San Jose State University and a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Psychology from the University of California Santa Cruz. He has lectured nationally and has taught at San Jose State University and the University of California at Santa Cruz in juvenile and criminal justice reform.


Opal West
Senior Associate, The Annie E. Casey Foundation


Opal West is a senior associate with the Annie E. Casey Foundation. As part of the Foundation’s Juvenile Justice Strategy Group, her work focuses on youth probation, the disposition most often imposed on young people who enter our nation’s juvenile justice system. West is helping to transform youth probation nationally into a focused intervention that promotes personal growth and long-term success for youth who pose significant risks for serious offending. Also, she guides juvenile justice agencies to treat families as partners. West began her career as a juvenile probation and parole officer in Louisiana. Working for state government there, she led efforts to improve conditions of confinement in detention centers across the state. She also led statewide expansion efforts for the JDAI® approach to building a better and more equitable youth justice system and was appointed to serve on a task force to develop standards of care for state-run secure facilities and local detention centers. West is a graduate of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette with a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice.