Welcome to your State Required Training - Session 5 / Avery&Kimmey

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1. Physical signs of sexual abuse may include:
2. A five year old needs to go to the bathroom. There will be a balance of power if the child goes with:
3. Which of the following can be effects of child sexual abuse:
If you leave a 17 year old camper alone in a cabin with a 10 year old camper, you have increased the level of risk for child abuse because you have:
5. If you suspect sexual abuse, it is best to wait a few weeks to see if there is evidence to support the claim:
6. Sexual abuse may also be committed by a person under the age of 18 when the person is significantly older than the victim or when the perpetrator is in a position of power and control over the victim:
7. Child sexual abuse is a criminal offense in all 50 states:
8. Volunteers can be charged with sexual abuse of a child:
9. Camp programs can not be held liable for child sexual abuse:
10. A study has revealed as much as 56 percent of child molestation cases are committed by adolescents, mostly males:
11. The victim seldom knows his/her molester:
12. The most prevalent type of offender is the situational offender:
13. One way to lower risk is to have two unrelated adults present at every activity:
14. Today, most teens are not sexually active, so it is not necessary to monitor and supervise campers in order to prevent consensual sexual activity:
15. Withdrawal from social activities and friends may be a behavioral sign of sexual abuse:
16. A sex offender often spends more time with children than with people his/her own age:
17. Sexual abuse may be defined as any interaction between a child and an adult in which the child is being used for the sexual stimulation of the perpetrator:
18. Children never molest other children:
19. In the U.S., as many as 1 in 3 girls will be sexually abused at some point in their childhood:
20. Non-touching sexual abuse offenses include pornography and exhibitionism:
21. Women are never sexual abusers:
22. Risk of sexual abuse increases as isolation increases:
23. Never express disbelief, minimize the complaint, or place blame on the victim when an allegation is made:
24. Not all allegations need to be documented and reported:
25. You should never counsel a camper alone after “lights out.”
26. Staff members should watch for and correct any sexually suggestive behavior from campers and between campers:
27. We should assess the level of risk of all activities by considering the following three factors: isolation, accountability, and power and control:
28. Staff members should always contact an alleged perpetrator immediately following an allegation:
29. If you and your co-counselor decide to take your campers on a special outing and you fail to notify your session director beforehand, you have increased the level of risk by ignoring the accountability factor:
30. Activities between older campers and younger campers create an imbalance of power and therefore should always be supervised by staff members: