CWEL Study Guide 2026
Everything you need to pass the CWEL exam in one place: the exam format, every topic to study, real practice questions with explanations, flashcards, and full-length practice tests. Free, no sign-up needed.
📋 CWEL Exam Format at a Glance
📚 CWEL Topics to Study (23)
✍️ Sample CWEL Questions & Answers
1. Which federal law established the framework for child welfare services and required states to make 'reasonable efforts' to prevent removal of children from their homes?
The Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-272) established the 'reasonable efforts' requirement and the framework for child welfare services.
2. What is the primary distinguishing feature of 'trauma-informed' case management in child welfare?
Trauma-informed practice recognizes the pervasive impact of trauma, understands how it shapes behavior, integrates knowledge of trauma into all interactions, and actively avoids practices that re-traumatize.
3. Which developmental theory explains that children learn through observation and imitation of others in their environment, which is relevant to understanding intergenerational patterns of abuse?
Bandura's social learning theory explains that children learn behaviors, including aggressive and abusive behaviors, by observing and imitating models—relevant to understanding why abuse can be transmitted intergenerationally.
4. May not have the resources, loving parents, etc. People try to live up to this stereotype.
The description points to how parents who lack resources or good role models may unintentionally raise children who become dependent and helpless — a cycle tied to the concept of learned helplessness in parenting. Parents trying to live up to an impossible stereotype without adequate support illustrates this dynamic. The other options — Senator Walter Mondale, Home is a haven of stability, and First School for special workers — are unrelated concepts that do not describe this parenting cycle.
5. When a foster parent wishes to adopt the child currently in their care, this arrangement is called:
Foster-to-adopt (or legal-risk adoption) occurs when foster parents wish to adopt the child in their care if parental rights are terminated; it is called 'legal risk' because the outcome is not yet determined.
6. The NASW Code of Ethics identifies which value as the primary ethical obligation of social workers, including those in child welfare?
The primary ethical obligation of social workers is service—elevating clients' interests and well-being above personal gain, with child welfare workers holding this obligation toward children and families.