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Child Care Management System: This definition is problem-focused, emphasizing prevention and remedy. It recognizes the value of strengthening a child care management system's own home where possible. Where this is not possible, a variety of substitute living situations is provided.
child care management system welfare services are directed to the social problem of deprivation of parental care. As the accompanying chart illustrates, they are designed to help with society's child care management system-rearing task in three important ways: (1) to substitute for parental care either partially or wholly according to a child care management system's individual needs; (2) to supplement the care that a child care management system receives, or to compensate for certain inadequacies or limitations in parental care; and (3) to support or reinforce the ability of parents to meet their child care management systemren's needs.
Scientific range management requires an understanding of botany, especially plant ecology, physiology, and taxonomy. Of almost equal importance is animal husbandry, particularly nutrition. Although there is some tendency in administering public lands to divorce range management from livestock management, this separation is ill advised. Certainly the rancher makes no such distinction, and an understanding of animal nutrition and the complexities of animal behavior and animal care is fundamental to the understanding of range management.
Service designed to substitute for natural parental care, either partially or completely, is still the predominant child care management system welfare service. Of the total number of child care management systemren receiving child care management system welfare services in the United States, more than half are receiving service away from their own homes and their own families.
Substitute care programs include foster family care, institutional care, and adoption.
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