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Competency
Assessment for Sexual Assault Prevention Practitioners (CASAPP):
Background, Instrument, and Scoring Instructions
Background
In 2020, the Department of
Defense’s Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office (SAPRO)
developed a Prevention Plan of Action that aims to improve the
implementation of evidence-based sexual assault prevention
programming across all branches of the U.S. military. In support of
this plan, the RAND Corporation’s National Defense Research
Institute developed The Competency Assessment for Sexual Assault
Prevention Practitioners (CASAPP)
to help assess
prevention practitioners’ expertise in sexual assault
prevention. The purpose of this scale is for teams of professionals
who work in the field of sexual assault prevention to assess their
team’s individual and collective knowledge and job relevance of
essential knowledge, best practices, and skills. This scale was
adapted from the Injury Prevention Assessment tool (Villaveces,
Stucky, Runyan, Moore, & Berlin, 2010), which was designed
broadly for prevention practitioners performing injury and violence
prevention work, to better reflect work specific to the primary
prevention of sexual assault.
The scale is informed by prevention
science as well as practical guidance about what is needed to do
sexual assault prevention work. As such, essential competencies are
outlined with associated roles ranging from manager, intervention and
evaluation designer, educator, and advocate. Given the wide range of
roles, it is likely that each team member would not self-assess every
competency and item highly in terms of knowledge or job relevance.
For example, some individuals in a team will have an educator role in
which they focus on delivering program material and thus they do not
need to have high knowledge in program management tasks like
justifying a budget or hiring. Rather, it is important that at the
team-level these competencies are represented by one or more members
of the team so that full coverage of all the competencies is achieved
collectively.
Therefore, we recommend that this
scale is used by entities (e.g., organizations, nonprofits,
university departments) in the following ways. It should be
administered to each member in a team so that at both an individual
and team levels, areas for needed growth can be identified and
addressed. For an example at the individual level, the scale could be
used to identify areas where specific team members could benefit from
additional training or professional development. If a team member is
tasked with program evaluation but rates their knowledge of essential
program evaluation concepts to be low, this team member can be
supported with trainings and resources to bolster knowledge in order
to perform effectively. At the team level, the scale can be used to
identify gaps in knowledge across the team (e.g., a gap in knowledge
about how to adapt a program to a new population or new delivery
system) as well as specific sets of knowledge that might not be fully
utilized by the team. For example, the team might identify that no
individual member rated dissemination to be relevant to their
position and yet two team members rated themselves as being highly
knowledgeable in dissemination. Discovering that this knowledge is
available could allow teams to better leverage the knowledge and
skills of their team members (e.g., by assigning individuals with
high knowledge in dissemination to those sorts of tasks as they
arise).
The
CASAPP was tested among 33 individuals with varying levels of
prevention background. In this preliminary test, those with less
prevention background had lower knowledge and job relevance scores
than those with greater experience. While these results suggest the
measure has validity for distinguishing between individuals with
varying level of prevention expertise, the measure has not been
published in a peer reviewed journal.
Citation
for this instrument:
O’Neill A, Acosta J, Chinman
M. (2020). Competency Assessment for Sexual Assault Prevention
Practitioners (CASAPP): Background, Instrument, and Scoring
Instructions. RAND Corporation: Santa Monica, CA.
Competency Assessment for
Sexual Assault Prevention Practitioners
Instrument
The
purpose of this survey is to assess the expertise needed for sexual
assault prevention. No one person is expected to have expertise in
all eight areas, but understanding your expertise can help determine
how you can best contribute to a larger prevention team. For each
item in the survey, you will be asked to rate how knowledgeable you
are and how relevant it is to your job or position. If you are highly
skilled in an area in general (e.g., program evaluation) but have not
applied it to sexual assault specific topics (e.g., evaluating a
sexual assault prevention program), rate yourself slightly lower in
that area than you would rate yourself if the item was asking about
more general knowledge/expertise. There are no right or wrong
answers, please give us your best guess.
Competency
1: Describe and explain sexual assault as a major public health
problem
Rate
how knowledgeable you are about each item from 1 (No knowledge) to 5
(Extensive knowledge/expertise) and how relevant each item is to your
job or position from 1 (Not relevant) to 5 (Central to my job or
position).
|
Knowledge
|
Relevance
|
|
No
knowledge
|
Extensive knowledge
|
Not
relevant
|
Central to my job
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
Define sexual assault and describe the associated core
concepts such as consent and force.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe long-term impacts of sexual assault
on survivors.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Explain why sexual assault is preventable.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe an approach to prevention that
includes the following steps: (1) problem detection/assessment,
(2) identification of risk and protective factors, (3)
development of interventions and (4) evaluation of the
effectiveness of interventions.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Articulate the differences between the
paradigms of response versus primary prevention in regard to
sexual assault in terms of the goals, target audience, and
facilitator skillsets.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Explain the importance of cross-agency
collaboration and the role that different agencies, organizations
and disciplines (e.g., Title IX Coordinators, LGBTQ centers, rape
crisis centers) play in sexual assault prevention.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe at least one conceptual model (e.g.,
social ecological model, Haddon Matrix) and how they are used to
understand the multiple factors underlying sexual assault.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe the influence of risk factors on the
sexual assault perpetration and victimization at each of the
levels of analysis: individual (e.g., gender, lack of empathy),
relationship (e.g., abusive intimate relationship), community or
organization (e.g., general tolerance of sexual violence within
the community), societal (e.g., weak laws related to sexual
violence and gender equity).
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe the influence of protective factors
against sexual assault perpetration and victimization at the
various levels of analysis: individual (e.g., gender, emotional
health), relationship (e.g., parental use of reasoning to resolve
family conflict), community or organization (e.g., general lack
of tolerance of sexual violence within the community), societal
(e.g., norms that promote gender equality, strong laws relating
to sexual violence and gender equity).
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Explain how social inequality and oppressive
systems (e.g., sexism, gender inequality) lay the foundation for
sexual assault.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Continue to next page.
Competency 2: Ability to access, interpret, use and present sexual
assault data
Rate
how knowledgeable you are about each item from 1 (No knowledge) to 5
(Extensive knowledge/expertise) and how relevant each item is to your
job or position from 1 (Not relevant) to 5 (Central to my job or
position).
|
Knowledge
|
Relevance
|
|
No
knowledge
|
Extensive knowledge
|
Not
relevant
|
Central to my job
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
Describe key sources of data (e.g., National
Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NISVS)) at the
national, state and community level and describe their strengths
and weaknesses.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
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|
Describe the differences between primary
(“self-collected”) and secondary data (“existing
data”) and provide examples of the appropriate uses of each
method.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
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|
Describe how data can be used to identify
populations experiencing disparate risks of either sexual assault
perpetration or victimization (e.g., by gender, race).
|
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|
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|
Explain how data can be used to identify
emerging issues in sexual assault (e.g., spikes in prevalence).
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Identify the ethical and legal issues
involved in the collection and use of sexual violence data.
|
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|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Define quantitative and qualitative forms of
data and give examples of their use in constructing and/or
evaluating sexual assault prevention programs. Describe the
benefits and limitations of each kind of data.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Explain the importance of data for use in
priority setting, program planning, quality improvement, and
evaluation in sexual assault prevention.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe how qualitative and quantitative
data can be used in conducting both assets and needs assessments
of a community of interest.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Demonstrate the ability to present data in a
clear and understandable manner for different audiences.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Explain data issues unique to sexual assault
from the issue of underreporting to the phenomenon of sexual
assault reports increasing rather than decreasing
subsequent to intervention delivery.
|
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|
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|
Continue to next page.
Competency 3: Ability to design, tailor, and implement sexual
assault prevention activities
Rate
how knowledgeable you are about each item from 1 (No knowledge) to 5
(Extensive knowledge/expertise) and how relevant each item is to your
job or position from 1 (Not relevant) to 5 (Central to my job or
position).
|
Knowledge
|
Relevance
|
|
No
knowledge
|
Extensive knowledge
|
Not
relevant
|
Central to my job
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
Identify types/examples of current and
potential stakeholders/partners across multiple disciplines and
their current prevention activities.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Demonstrate the use of a conceptual model or
theoretical framework (e.g., social ecological model, logic
model, Haddon Matrix) for identifying intervention opportunities
in the community or organization context prevention efforts are
occurring within.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Provide examples of interventions that
target the various levels of analysis (individual, interpersonal,
community or organizational, societal) to prevent sexual assault.
Describe how they can work together to create a comprehensive
program.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
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|
For sexual assault, choose and justify an
evidence-based intervention based on characteristics of the
intended audience.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Design an implementation plan, to include a
description of the intended audience, goals and objectives,
culturally appropriate proposed activities, evaluation component,
timeline and resources.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe how cultural, socio-economic,
political and physical environment factors may influence
intervention design and implementation.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Using a framework (e.g., traffic light
framework from the CDC), identify the essential elements (e.g.,
key messages) of an evidenced-based intervention and determine if
desired adaptations (e.g., reducing delivery time of a program)
would support these essential elements
|
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|
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|
Distinguish between interventions aimed at
preventing sexual assault that are evidence-based and those that
are not.
|
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|
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|
Understand the multiple key elements of
effective prevention practice (e.g., varied teaching methods).
|
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|
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|
Continue to next page.
Competency 4: Ability to evaluate sexual assault prevention
activities
Rate
how knowledgeable you are about each item from 1 (No knowledge) to 5
(Extensive knowledge/expertise) and how relevant each item is to your
job or position from 1 (Not relevant) to 5 (Central to my job or
position).
|
Knowledge
|
Relevance
|
|
No
knowledge
|
Extensive knowledge
|
Not
relevant
|
Central to my job
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
Describe the importance of evaluation and
why and when evaluation should be done.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe how evaluation should be integrated
into the design and running of an intervention.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe formative, process, outcome, and
impact evaluation and describe when and how to use each.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe the use of qualitative and
quantitative methods in evaluation and explain the benefits and
limitations of each method.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Identify potential stakeholders/partners and
resources to assist in conducting an evaluation.
|
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|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Identify potential barriers to specific
types of evaluation and approaches to overcome these.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Develop an evaluation plan for a sexual
assault prevention program guided by a conceptual model or
theoretical framework (e.g., social ecological model, logic
model, Haddon Matrix).
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Competency
5: Ability to build and manage a sexual assault prevention program
Rate
how knowledgeable you are about each item from 1 (No knowledge) to 5
(Extensive knowledge/expertise) and how relevant each item is to your
job or position from 1 (Not relevant) to 5 (Central to my job or
position).
|
Knowledge
|
Relevance
|
|
No
knowledge
|
Extensive knowledge
|
Not
relevant
|
Central to my job
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
Describe how to establish and maintain an
advisory group to assist with the development and monitoring of
goals for sexual assault prevention within a population (e.g., a
community, a state, among children, among Latinos, etc.).
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Develop a long-term plan for sexual assault
prevention and identify issues that may impact program goals and
sustainability.
|
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|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Identify existing and potential resources
for sexual assault prevention activities.
|
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|
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|
Develop a proposal for funding from an
external source for prevention activities.
|
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|
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|
Demonstrate the ability to create, justify
and manage a budget for sexual assault prevention efforts and
staff.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Demonstrate the ability to prioritize the
allocation of resources (e.g., personnel, finances, space, time,
equipment).
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Continue to next page.
Competency 5: Ability to build and manage a sexual assault
prevention program (continued)
|
Knowledge
|
Relevance
|
|
No
knowledge
|
Extensive knowledge
|
Not
relevant
|
Central to my job
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
Develop a plan for hiring, training,
supervising and promoting the professional development of staff.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Demonstrate knowledge of ethical issues that
may arise in sexual assault prevention practice.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe ways that sexual assault prevention
can be integrated into other programs (e.g., programs within the
agency, alcohol and drug prevention programs, other violence
prevention programs) and identify common barriers to integration.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Demonstrate the ability to leverage
evaluation finding to further program growth.
|
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|
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|
Develop and apply benchmarks to monitor
program success (e.g., 25% of participants significantly
increased intentions to intervene in sexual violence after a
bystander intervention is delivered to them
|
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|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Competency
6: Ability to disseminate information related to sexual assault
prevention to the community, other professionals, key policy makers
and leaders through diverse communication networks
Rate
how knowledgeable you are about each item from 1 (No knowledge) to 5
(Extensive knowledge/expertise) and how relevant each item is to your
job or position from 1 (Not relevant) to 5 (Central to my job or
position).
|
Knowledge
|
Relevance
|
|
No
knowledge
|
Extensive knowledge
|
Not
relevant
|
Central to my job
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
Design and deliver effective messages for
different audiences.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Demonstrate the ability to prepare different
types of culturally appropriate written documents (e.g., written
testimony, public health brief, fact sheet, press release, letter
to the editor, policy statement, website content, etc.) to
effectively communicate information about sexual assault.
|
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|
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|
Serve as a resource to the public, media and
policy makers when appropriate and be able to provide referrals
to other sources.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Participate in the preparation of a
professional report or publication that addresses a sexual
assault prevention finding or theory.
|
〇
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|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Convey what your prevention efforts are
trying to promote (e.g., safe and respectful environments) in
addition to what these efforts are trying to prevent (i.e. sexual
assault).
|
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|
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|
Communicate evaluation findings (e.g., what
changed, in whom, by how much, what this means for your program).
|
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|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Continue to next page.
Competency 7. Ability to foster change related to sexual assault
prevention through policy, enforcement, advocacy and education
Rate
how knowledgeable you are about each item from 1 (No knowledge) to 5
(Extensive knowledge/expertise) and how relevant each item is to your
job or position from 1 (Not relevant) to 5 (Central to my job or
position).
|
Knowledge
|
Relevance
|
|
No
knowledge
|
Extensive knowledge
|
Not
relevant
|
Central to my job
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
Develop and implement a culturally
appropriate marketing plan (e.g., using relevant language and
messengers) to promote a sexual assault prevention activity
(e.g., within an organization, given community, etc.).
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Describe the differences between educating,
lobbying and advocacy as tools to stimulate change in the
community.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Identify key prevention policies, laws or
regulations that address sexual assault and its prevention.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Identify gaps in policies, laws, regulations
and enforcement that, if addressed, could reduce sexual assault
in the community.
|
〇
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|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Identify information on the consequences and
associated costs of sexual assault (e.g., health care
utilization) and be able to describe its application in policy
making.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Demonstrate the ability to work effectively
with advocacy/survivor groups to advance sexual assault
prevention policies, laws or regulations.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Demonstrate the ability to use research and
evaluation to develop policy, advocacy and education initiatives
that are culturally appropriate for the community or organization
where prevention efforts are focused.
|
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|
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|
Demonstrate the ability to translate policy
into organizational plans and programs.
|
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|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Understand how policy change can have
positive or negative effects on sexual assault outcomes.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Coordinate efforts across prevention (e.g.,
your program, drug and alcohol prevention programs, prevention
programs for other types of violence) and response (e.g., victim
advocates).
|
〇
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|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Demonstrate a trauma-informed approach when
delivering sensitive program content.
|
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|
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|
Demonstrate knowledge of best practices for
fostering engaging learning environments (e.g., dividing content
into small digestible chunks supplemented with activities,
adapting teaching to different learning styles).
|
〇
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|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Continue to next page.
Competency 8: Ability to maintain and further develop competency
as a sexual assault prevention professional
Rate
how knowledgeable you are about each item from 1 (No knowledge) to 5
(Extensive knowledge/expertise) and how relevant each item is to your
job or position from 1 (Not relevant) to 5 (Central to my job or
position).
|
Knowledge
|
Relevance
|
|
No
knowledge
|
Extensive knowledge
|
Not
relevant
|
Central to my job
|
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
1 2 3 4 5
|
Demonstrate how to access and use scientific
articles and resources from reputable organizations (like the CDC
and National Sexual Violence Resource Center) to obtain updated
information regarding sexual violence prevention.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Identify key professional organizations and
agencies that are related to sexual violence prevention and
describe how these organizations can assist in maintaining and
developing skills.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Identify a potential mentor/advisor who has
experience in sexual assault prevention and can assist with
professional development.
|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Identify and describe training resources,
conferences and courses that would be appropriate for learning
new information on sexual assault prevention strategies, research
and best practices.
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
〇
〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Develop and maintain individual capacity
(knowledge, skills, motivation) to perform prevention work.
|
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|
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〇 〇 〇 〇
|
Thank you!!
Instructions
for Scoring the Competency
Assessment for Sexual Assault Prevention Practitioners
The
CASAPP will produce knowledge and job relevance scores for each of
the eight competencies assessed:
Ability
to describe and explain sexual assault as a major social and health
problem.
Ability
to access, interpret, use and present sexual assault data.
Ability
to design, tailor, and implement sexual assault prevention
activities.
Ability
to evaluate sexual assault prevention activities.
Ability
to build and manage a sexual assault prevention program.
Ability
to disseminate information related to sexual assault prevention to
the community, other professionals, key policy makers and leaders
through diverse communication networks.
Ability
to foster change related to sexual assault prevention through
policy, enforcement, advocacy and education.
Ability
to maintain and further develop competency as a sexual assault
prevention professional.
Knowledge
scores range from 1 (No knowledge) to 5 (Extensive knowledge or
expertise). Relevance scores range from 1 (No relevance) to 5
(Central to my job or position). To create the summary scores, you
will need to take two steps:
Calculate
knowledge and relevance scores for each individual on your team.
Calculate
a knowledge and relevance score across all members of your team.
Individual
Calculations
Individual
Team Member Knowledge Scores
To
calculate knowledge scores for each individual on your team, take an
average of the item ratings for knowledge on each of the eight
competencies.
Competency 1: Team member A
Knowledge score = AVERAGE Q1 to Q10
Competency 2: Team member A
Knowledge score = AVERAGE Q11 to Q20
Competency 3: Team member A
Knowledge score = AVERAGE Q21 to Q29
Competency 4: Team member A
Knowledge score = AVERAGE Q30 to Q36
Competency 5: Team member A
Knowledge score = AVERAGE Q37 to Q47
Competency 6: Team member A
Knowledge score = AVERAGE Q48 to Q53
Competency 7: Team member A
Knowledge score = AVERAGE Q54 to Q65
Competency 8: Team member A
Knowledge score = AVERAGE Q66 to Q70
Individual
Team Member Relevance Scores
To
calculate relevance scores for each individual on your team, take an
average of the ratings to relevance items for each of the eight
competencies.
Competency 1: Team member A
Relevance score = AVERAGE Q1 to Q10
Competency 2: Team member A
Relevance score = AVERAGE Q11 to Q20
Competency 3: Team member A
Relevance score = AVERAGE Q21 to Q29
Competency 4: Team member A
Relevance score = AVERAGE Q30 to Q36
Competency 5: Team member A
Relevance score = AVERAGE Q37 to Q47
Competency 6: Team member A
Relevance score = AVERAGE Q48 to Q53
Competency 7: Team member A
Relevance score = AVERAGE Q54 to Q65
Competency 8: Team member A
Relevance score = AVERAGE Q66 to Q70
Team
Calculations
Team
Knowledge Scores
To
calculate knowledge scores across all members of your team, take an
average of the individual team members’ competency knowledge
scores for each of the eight competencies.
Competency 1: Team Knowledge score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 2: Team Knowledge score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 3: Team Knowledge score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 4: Team Knowledge score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 5: Team Knowledge score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 6: Team Knowledge score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 7: Team Knowledge score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 8: Team Knowledge score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Team
Relevance Scores
To
calculate knowledge scores across all members of your team, take an
average of the individual team members’ competency relevance
scores for each of the eight competencies.
Competency 1: Team Relevance score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 2: Team Relevance score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 3: Team Relevance score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 4: Team Relevance score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 5: Team Relevance score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 6: Team Relevance score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 7: Team Relevance score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
Competency 8: Team Relevance score
= AVERAGE of the Knowledge Score for Team Member A to Team Member Z
References
Villaveces,
A., Stucky, B. D., Runyan, C. W., Moore, K. S., & Berlin, S. P.
(2010). The Development of an Instrument for Evaluating Core
Competencies in Violence and Injury Prevention. Journal
of Public Health Management and Practice, 16(4),
337-344. doi:10.1097/PHH.0b013e3181bede2a
Appendix
A. Table of Competencies and Corresponding Assessment Items
Competency
|
Corresponding Assessment
Items
|
Competency 1. Ability to
DESCRIBE and EXPLAIN sexual assault as a major social and health
problem.
|
Define
sexual assault and describe the associated core concepts such as
consent and force.
Describe
long-term impacts of sexual assault on survivors.
Explain
why sexual assault is preventable.
Describe
an approach to prevention that includes the following steps: (1)
problem detection/assessment, (2) identification of risk and
protective factors, (3) development of interventions and (4)
evaluation of the effectiveness of interventions.
Articulate
the differences between the paradigms of response versus primary
prevention in regard to sexual assault in terms of the goals,
target audience, and facilitator skillsets.
Explain
the importance of cross-agency collaboration and the role that
different agencies, organizations and disciplines (e.g., Title IX
Coordinators, LGBTQ centers, rape crisis centers) play in sexual
assault prevention.
Describe
at least one conceptual model (e.g., social ecological model,
Haddon Matrix) and how they are used to understand the multiple
factors underlying sexual assault.
Describe
the influence of risk factors on the sexual assault perpetration
and victimization at each of the levels of analysis: individual
(e.g., gender, lack of empathy), relationship (e.g., abusive
intimate relationship), community or organization (e.g., general
tolerance of sexual violence within the community), societal
(e.g., weak laws related to sexual violence and gender equity).
Describe
the influence of protective factors against sexual assault
perpetration and victimization at the various levels of analysis:
individual (e.g., gender, emotional health), relationship (e.g.,
parental use of reasoning to resolve family conflict), community
or organization (e.g., general lack of tolerance of sexual
violence within the community), societal (e.g., norms that
promote gender equality, strong laws relating to sexual violence
and gender equity).
Explain how social
inequality and oppressive systems (e.g., sexism, gender
inequality) lay the foundation for sexual assault.
|
Competency 2. Ability to access,
interpret, use and present sexual assault DATA.
|
Describe
key sources of data (e.g., National Intimate Partner and Sexual
Violence Survey (NISVS)) at the national, state and community
level and describe their strengths and weaknesses.
Describe
the differences between primary (“self-collected”)
and secondary data (“existing data”) and provide
examples of the appropriate uses of each method.
Describe
how data can be used to identify populations experiencing
disparate risks of either sexual assault perpetration or
victimization (e.g., by gender, race).
Explain
how data can be used to identify emerging issues in sexual
assault (e.g., spikes in prevalence).
Identify
the ethical and legal issues involved in the collection and use
of sexual violence data.
Define
quantitative and qualitative forms of data and give examples of
their use in constructing and/or evaluating sexual assault
prevention programs. Describe the benefits and limitations of
each kind of data.
Explain
the importance of data for use in priority setting, program
planning, quality improvement, and evaluation in sexual assault
prevention.
Describe
how qualitative and quantitative data can be used in conducting
both assets and needs assessments of a community of interest.
Demonstrate
the ability to present data in a clear and understandable manner
for different audiences.
Explain data issues
unique to sexual assault from the issue of underreporting to the
phenomenon of sexual assault reports increasing rather than
decreasing subsequent to intervention delivery.
|
Competency 3. Ability to DESIGN,
TAILOR, and IMPLEMENT sexual assault prevention activities.
|
Identify
types/examples of current and potential stakeholders/partners
across multiple disciplines and their current prevention
activities.
Demonstrate
the use of a conceptual model or theoretical framework (e.g.,
social ecological model, logic model, Haddon Matrix) for
identifying intervention opportunities in the community or
organization context prevention efforts are occurring within.
Provide
examples of interventions that target the various levels of
analysis (individual, interpersonal, community or organizational,
societal) to prevent sexual assault. Describe how they can work
together to create a comprehensive program.
For
sexual assault, choose and justify an evidence-based intervention
based on characteristics of the intended audience.
Design
an implementation plan, to include a description of the intended
audience, goals and objectives, culturally appropriate proposed
activities, evaluation component, timeline and resources.
Describe
how cultural, socio-economic, political and physical environment
factors may influence intervention design and implementation.
Using
a framework (e.g., traffic light framework from the CDC),
identify the essential elements (e.g., key messages) of an
evidenced-based intervention and determine if desired adaptations
(e.g., reducing delivery time of a program) would support these
essential elements
Distinguish
between interventions aimed at preventing sexual assault that are
evidence-based and those that are not.
Understand the multiple
key elements of effective prevention practice (e.g., varied
teaching methods).
|
Competency 4. Ability to
EVALUATE sexual assault prevention activities.
|
Describe
the importance of evaluation and why and when evaluation should
be done.
Describe
how evaluation should be integrated into the design and running
of an intervention.
Describe
formative, process, outcome, and impact evaluation and describe
when and how to use each.
Describe
the use of qualitative and quantitative methods in evaluation and
explain the benefits and limitations of each method.
Identify
potential stakeholders/partners and resources to assist in
conducting an evaluation.
Identify
potential barriers to specific types of evaluation and approaches
to overcome these.
Develop an evaluation
plan for a sexual assault prevention program guided by a
conceptual model or theoretical framework (e.g., social
ecological model, logic model, Haddon Matrix).
|
Competency 5. Ability to BUILD
and MANAGE a sexual assault prevention program.
|
Describe
how to establish and maintain an advisory group to assist with
the development and monitoring of goals for sexual assault
prevention within a population (e.g., a community, a state, among
children, among Latinos, etc.).
Develop
a long-term plan for sexual assault prevention and identify
issues that may impact program goals and sustainability.
Identify
existing and potential resources for sexual assault prevention
activities.
Develop
a proposal for funding from an external source for prevention
activities.
Demonstrate
the ability to create, justify and manage a budget for sexual
assault prevention efforts and staff.
Demonstrate
the ability to prioritize the allocation of resources (e.g.,
personnel, finances, space, time, equipment).
Develop
a plan for hiring, training, supervising and promoting the
professional development of staff.
Demonstrate
knowledge of ethical issues that may arise in sexual assault
prevention practice.
Describe
ways that sexual assault prevention can be integrated into other
programs (e.g., programs within the agency, alcohol and drug
prevention programs, other violence prevention programs) and
identify common barriers to integration.
Demonstrate
the ability to leverage evaluation finding to further program
growth.
Develop and apply
benchmarks to monitor program success (e.g., 25% of participants
significantly increased intentions to intervene in sexual
violence after a bystander intervention is delivered to them
|
Competency 6. Ability to
DISSEMINATE INFORMATION related to sexual assault prevention to
the community, other professionals, key policy makers and leaders
through diverse communication networks.
|
Design
and deliver effective messages for different audiences.
Demonstrate
the ability to prepare different types of culturally appropriate
written documents (e.g., written testimony, public health brief,
fact sheet, press release, letter to the editor, policy
statement, website content, etc.) to effectively communicate
information about sexual assault.
Serve
as a resource to the public, media and policy makers when
appropriate and be able to provide referrals to other sources.
Participate
in the preparation of a professional report or publication that
addresses a sexual assault prevention finding or theory.
Convey
what your prevention efforts are trying to promote (e.g., safe
and respectful environments) in addition to what these efforts
are trying to prevent (i.e. sexual assault).
Communicate evaluation
findings (e.g., what changed, in whom, by how much, what this
means for your program).
|
Competency 7. Ability to FOSTER
CHANGE related to sexual assault prevention through policy,
enforcement, advocacy and education.
|
Develop
and implement a culturally appropriate marketing plan (e.g.,
using relevant language and messengers) to promote a sexual
assault prevention activity (e.g., within an organization, given
community, etc.).
Describe
the differences between educating, lobbying and advocacy as tools
to stimulate change in the community.
Identify
key prevention policies, laws or regulations that address sexual
assault and its prevention.
Identify
gaps in policies, laws, regulations and enforcement that, if
addressed, could reduce sexual assault in the community.
Identify
information on the consequences and associated costs of sexual
assault (e.g., health care utilization) and be able to describe
its application in policy making.
Demonstrate
the ability to work effectively with advocacy/survivor groups to
advance sexual assault prevention policies, laws or regulations.
Demonstrate
the ability to use research and evaluation to develop policy,
advocacy and education initiatives that are culturally
appropriate for the community or organization where prevention
efforts are focused.
Demonstrate
the ability to translate policy into organizational plans and
programs.
Understand
how policy change can have positive or negative effects on sexual
assault outcomes.
Coordinate
efforts across prevention (e.g., your program, drug and alcohol
prevention programs, prevention programs for other types of
violence) and response (e.g., victim advocates).
Demonstrate
a trauma-informed approach when delivering sensitive program
content.
Demonstrate
knowledge of best practices for fostering engaging learning
environments (e.g., dividing content into small digestible chunks
supplemented with activities, adapting teaching to different
learning styles).
|
Competency 8. Ability to
maintain and further develop COMPETENCY as a sexual assault
prevention professional.
|
Demonstrate
how to access and use scientific articles and resources from
reputable organizations (like the CDC and National Sexual
Violence Resource Center) to obtain updated information regarding
sexual violence prevention.
Identify
key professional organizations and agencies that are related to
sexual violence prevention and describe how these organizations
can assist in maintaining and developing skills.
Identify
a potential mentor/advisor who has experience in sexual assault
prevention and can assist with professional development.
Identify
and describe training resources, conferences and courses that
would be appropriate for learning new information on sexual
assault prevention strategies, research and best practices.
Develop and maintain
individual capacity (knowledge, skills, motivation) to perform
prevention work.
|
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | O'Neill, AnnaMarie |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-07-19 |