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Reviewer access — realistic course run-through. This is the reviewer’s view of the live course experience, provided for Sixth Judicial Circuit review only. The course is not yet circuit-approved: enrollment, payment, and certificate issuance are disabled, and the certificate shown is a clearly-labeled sample.
Reviewer walkthrough

Florida Family Guardian Education Course — interactive content review

Click through every lesson and answer the knowledge-check and final questions to see instant correct/incorrect feedback, then preview the sample certificate. No login, enrollment, or payment is required.

Reviewer walkthrough — full course content, no login required. Review copy under F.S. 744.3145 / Sixth Judicial Circuit AO 2024-025; not for credit; enrollment, payment, and certificates remain disabled pending circuit approval.
8 hours / 480 minutes

8-hour family / nonprofessional guardian track

Nonprofessional guardians appointed for adults or broader guardianship duties

8 modules

Module 1. Guardian role, court authority, and least restrictive alternatives

60 minutes

Guardianship purpose, court appointment, letters of guardianship, limits of authority, attorney role, and alternatives to guardianship.

Required coverage: Introduces legal duties and responsibilities of the guardian, the rights context for the ward, and the four-month post-appointment education deadline.

The course opens by defining guardianship as a court-supervised relationship in which a guardian is appointed only after the court determines that rights must be delegated for the ward's protection. The guardian's authority comes from the court order and letters of guardianship, not from family preference alone.

Participants are told at orientation to calendar the statutory education deadline immediately. F.S. 744.3145 requires appointed guardians to complete the required instruction within four months after appointment unless the court waives, modifies, or adds requirements in the case.

Participants learn the difference between guardian of the person, guardian of the property, plenary guardianship, limited guardianship, and guardian advocacy. The lesson emphasizes reading the appointment order carefully and asking counsel or the court before acting outside the granted authority.

The module introduces less restrictive alternatives, including durable powers of attorney, health care surrogate designations, trusts, representative payees, supported decision-making, and family or community supports. Guardians are taught to preserve autonomy whenever possible.

The module closes with a court-communication map: what goes to the attorney, what is filed with the clerk, what may require prior court approval, and what must be documented for future reports.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: F.S. 744.3145, F.S. 744.361, and F.S. 744.362. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: Any action outside the express authority in the letters or any unclear delegation of rights. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: The order authorizes health-care decisions but says nothing about property. A bank asks the guardian to move money to pay care bills. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Calendar the four-month F.S. 744.3145 education deadline and ask counsel or the court before exceeding the order. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

The order authorizes health-care decisions but says nothing about property. A bank asks the guardian to move money to pay care bills.

Reviewer takeaway: Calendar the four-month F.S. 744.3145 education deadline and ask counsel or the court before exceeding the order.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: The court order and letters of guardianship, not family preference or informal agreement.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Appointment date, education deadline, letters of guardianship, order limits, attorney instructions, and any court communications.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: Any action outside the express authority in the letters or any unclear delegation of rights.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Assuming plenary authority when the order grants only limited authority.

Outcomes
  • Explain that guardianship authority is limited by the court order.
  • Distinguish guardian of the person from guardian of the property.
  • Identify less restrictive alternatives and autonomy-preserving supports.
  • Know when to seek attorney or court guidance before acting.
Review checks
  • Where does a guardian's legal authority come from?
  • When should an appointed guardian calendar the education deadline?
  • Why should a guardian read the letters and order before making decisions?
  • Scenario: the order gives authority over medical decisions but not property. What should the guardian do before trying to move money?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. Before taking action in Module 1. Guardian role, court authority, and least restrictive alternatives, what principle should control?

2. Which source should the guardian verify before acting?

3. Which mistake would create the clearest guardianship risk here?

4. Which proof set would best support later court review?

5. What fact pattern should make the guardian stop and ask for guidance?

6. What should the learner do with the module scenario?

7. Which legal anchor should a reviewer associate with this lesson?

8. How should post-approval mastery checks operate for this module?

Module 2. Legal duties, fiduciary standards, and prohibited conduct

60 minutes

Guardian duties, fiduciary loyalty, conflict avoidance, recordkeeping, court approval, and boundaries around gifts, borrowing, and self-dealing.

Required coverage: Covers legal duties and responsibilities of the guardian.

Guardians learn that they owe duties of loyalty, care, prudence, honesty, and obedience to court orders. Decisions must be made for the ward's benefit, not for family convenience, caregiver pressure, or the guardian's personal finances.

The lesson covers conflicts of interest, self-dealing, borrowing from the ward, gifts, compensation, commingling funds, and using guardianship property without authority. Participants learn to pause and seek court approval when a transaction could benefit the guardian or a related person.

Recordkeeping is presented as a daily habit. Guardians track calls, visits, medical decisions, receipts, payments, account statements, inventories, and court filings so annual reports and accountings are accurate.

The module includes examples of common mistakes: paying personal bills from a ward account, selling property without approval, ignoring tax or insurance deadlines, failing to notify the court of major changes, and acting outside letters of guardianship.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: F.S. 744.361, F.S. 744.3678, and fiduciary accounting principles. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: Any transaction that benefits the guardian, a relative, caregiver, or other interested person. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: A relative asks to be reimbursed from the ward's account for expenses but has no receipts and wants payment immediately. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Pause, document the request, preserve receipts, and obtain attorney or court guidance before payment. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

A relative asks to be reimbursed from the ward's account for expenses but has no receipts and wants payment immediately.

Reviewer takeaway: Pause, document the request, preserve receipts, and obtain attorney or court guidance before payment.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: Fiduciary duties, the appointment order, the letters of guardianship, and court supervision.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Receipts, statements, invoices, reimbursement notes, court approvals, and a log of significant decisions.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: Any transaction that benefits the guardian, a relative, caregiver, or other interested person.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Commingling funds, borrowing from the ward, paying personal expenses, or making a transaction that benefits the guardian.

Outcomes
  • Describe core fiduciary duties.
  • Recognize conflicts of interest and self-dealing risks.
  • Maintain records that support reports and accountings.
  • Identify actions that likely require attorney or court guidance.
Review checks
  • What does fiduciary loyalty mean in practical terms?
  • Why is commingling guardian and ward funds dangerous?
  • Give one example of conduct that may require prior court approval.
  • Scenario: a family member asks the guardian to reimburse personal expenses from the ward's account without receipts. What should the guardian document and confirm first?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. Which choice keeps a guardian's decision in Module 2. Legal duties, fiduciary standards, and prohibited conduct inside the proper authority?

2. What should be checked before the guardian treats an action as authorized?

3. What conduct should the guardian avoid before it becomes a court problem?

4. What documentation would make the guardian's decision easiest to verify?

5. When is attorney or court guidance the safest next step?

6. Which response best handles the practical problem in this module?

7. What Florida guardianship authority is this module designed to reinforce?

8. What assessment practice best protects course integrity after launch?

Module 3. Rights of the ward, dignity, participation, and communication

60 minutes

Ward rights, retained rights, dignity, privacy, communication access, visitation, decision participation, and respectful support.

Required coverage: Covers rights of the ward.

Participants learn that a ward retains rights that the court has not removed and should participate in decisions to the greatest extent possible. Guardianship should not erase preference, dignity, culture, relationships, or voice.

The module covers privacy, mail and communication access, personal property, visitation, religious preference, residence choice where possible, medical participation, and respectful language. Guardians are taught to document the ward's preferences and reasons when a requested choice cannot safely be followed.

The lesson explains supported decision-making inside guardianship: using plain language, offering choices, checking understanding, involving trusted supporters when appropriate, and avoiding unnecessary control.

The module also addresses signs of isolation, coercion, retaliation, neglect, or exploitation by others. Guardians learn to escalate safety concerns through counsel, the court, adult protective services, law enforcement, or emergency services as appropriate.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: Rights retained under Chapter 744 and F.S. 744.3215 concepts. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: A major restriction on visits, communication, residence, or personal choice when family conflict or safety concerns are present. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: The ward asks to visit a relative whom other family members dislike but no current safety order bars contact. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Use plain language, ask for the ward's preference, document the preference, and balance safety with retained rights. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

The ward asks to visit a relative whom other family members dislike but no current safety order bars contact.

Reviewer takeaway: Use plain language, ask for the ward's preference, document the preference, and balance safety with retained rights.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: The adjudication order, retained-rights analysis, the letters of guardianship, and ongoing court oversight.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Ward preferences, communication attempts, visit decisions, safety concerns, and reasons a preference could not be followed.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: A major restriction on visits, communication, residence, or personal choice when family conflict or safety concerns are present.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Treating guardianship as permission to isolate, silence, or override the ward without safety or legal justification.

Outcomes
  • Identify rights and preferences that should remain central.
  • Use communication practices that support dignity and participation.
  • Document when a ward preference cannot be followed.
  • Recognize abuse, neglect, isolation, or exploitation concerns.
Review checks
  • Why should a ward participate in decisions when possible?
  • What should a guardian document when declining a ward preference?
  • Name one warning sign that may require safety escalation.
  • Scenario: the ward asks to visit a relative the rest of the family dislikes. What rights, safety, and documentation questions should the guardian consider?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. A guardian is starting work on Module 3. Rights of the ward, dignity, participation, and communication. What should come first?

2. Which authority source is safest when the next step is unclear?

3. Which choice is the unsafe shortcut this module warns against?

4. Which record trail belongs in the file for this module?

5. Which situation is a pause point rather than a proceed-now moment?

6. How should the guardian convert the scenario into a defensible next step?

7. Which citation family best matches the module's required coverage?

8. Which review-check design supports honest guardian learning?

Module 4. Care planning, health context, capacity, and local resources

60 minutes

Health-system navigation, capacity as decision-specific, care teams, benefits, housing, transportation, crisis resources, and local support mapping.

Required coverage: Covers availability of local resources to aid the ward and supports annual care planning.

Guardians review capacity as decision-specific and potentially changing over time. A ward may understand some choices but need help with others, and a guardian should not assume global incapacity for every daily decision.

The module teaches how to coordinate with physicians, nurses, social workers, case managers, facilities, pharmacists, therapists, behavioral health providers, and benefit programs. The guardian's role is to organize information, ask questions, and make authorized decisions.

Participants build a local resource map covering emergency services, adult protective services, elder helplines, disability resources, transportation, meal support, housing, public benefits, respite care, legal aid, and court contacts. Circuits may require local resource lists in the approved packet.

The lesson also discusses medical boundaries: this course does not diagnose, treat, or replace clinical judgment. Health decisions must follow the court order, applicable consent rules, and advice from licensed clinicians.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: F.S. 744.3145 local-resource requirement and annual plan concepts. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: Major residence changes, contested medical decisions, lack of safe discharge plan, or unclear authority for consent. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: A ward is ready for discharge but needs transportation, medication support, food access, and follow-up care. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Map the ward's needs to the appointing circuit's local resources (Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, Adult Protective Services, transportation, and benefit programs), ask clinical questions, and document authorized decisions. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

A ward is ready for discharge but needs transportation, medication support, food access, and follow-up care.

Reviewer takeaway: Map the ward's needs to the appointing circuit's local resources (Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, Adult Protective Services, transportation, and benefit programs), ask clinical questions, and document authorized decisions.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: The court order, health-care authority granted in the letters, clinical advice, and local resource eligibility rules.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Care-team contacts, discharge plans, resource referrals, medication questions, transportation plans, and benefit contacts.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: Major residence changes, contested medical decisions, lack of safe discharge plan, or unclear authority for consent.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Assuming capacity is all-or-nothing or giving medical advice beyond the guardian's role.

Outcomes
  • Describe capacity as decision-specific rather than all-or-nothing.
  • Coordinate with care teams while staying within legal authority.
  • Prepare a local resource map for the ward's needs.
  • Respect medical and legal boundaries when making decisions.
Review checks
  • What does decision-specific capacity mean?
  • Name three categories of local resources a guardian may need.
  • Why should a guardian avoid giving medical advice beyond their role?
  • Scenario: the ward needs transportation, medication support, and housing help after discharge. Which local resources should the guardian map first?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. Which answer best reflects the core duty taught in Module 4. Care planning, health context, capacity, and local resources?

2. What record or instruction controls the guardian's scope of action?

3. What is the most important risk to screen out in this lesson?

4. What should the guardian preserve so the action can be reviewed later?

5. What trigger should send the guardian back to counsel, the clerk, or the court?

6. Which action best resolves the scenario without exceeding authority?

7. What statutory or court-rule anchor supports this module?

8. How should the module bank be delivered when learners are enrolled?

Module 5. Property, inventory, budgets, restricted accounts, and asset protection

60 minutes

Guardian-of-property duties, initial inventory, safeguarding assets, budgets, insurance, benefits, taxes, and restricted-account controls.

Required coverage: Covers financial accounting for ward property and guardian-of-property legal duties.

The module explains the guardian of the property's job: identify, marshal, protect, manage, and report the ward's assets according to the court order. Participants learn to separate the ward's property from all other property and to keep documentation from day one.

The lesson covers initial inventory, bank accounts, investment accounts, income, Social Security or pension benefits, real property, vehicles, personal property, insurance, debts, taxes, recurring expenses, and court restrictions on spending or transfers.

Guardians learn about restricted depository accounts, bonding, receipts, cancelled checks, invoices, bank statements, budgets, and the importance of avoiding cash transactions whenever possible.

The module uses scenarios such as selling a car, paying family caregivers, repairing a home, changing beneficiaries, and using funds for travel. Participants identify when the guardian needs counsel or court approval before acting.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: F.S. 744.362, F.S. 744.3678, and initial inventory/accounting requirements. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: Selling a vehicle or home, changing beneficiaries, paying family caregivers, or moving funds from a restricted account. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: The ward's car may need to be sold to pay facility costs, but relatives disagree and no sale order has been reviewed. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Build the inventory from source documents and confirm whether court approval is needed before asset changes. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

The ward's car may need to be sold to pay facility costs, but relatives disagree and no sale order has been reviewed.

Reviewer takeaway: Build the inventory from source documents and confirm whether court approval is needed before asset changes.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: The letters of guardianship, court orders on property authority, restricted-depository orders, and accounting rules.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Initial inventory documents, account titles, bank statements, receipts, appraisals, insurance records, tax notices, and sale approvals.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: Selling a vehicle or home, changing beneficiaries, paying family caregivers, or moving funds from a restricted account.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Using cash, failing to separate property, selling assets without authority, or spending before documentation is ready.

Outcomes
  • Prepare for initial inventory and asset protection duties.
  • Keep ward assets separate and documented.
  • Recognize restricted-account and bonding controls.
  • Identify financial actions that may need court approval.
Review checks
  • What is the purpose of an initial inventory?
  • Why should a guardian avoid cash transactions when possible?
  • Name one transaction that may require court approval.
  • Scenario: a guardian wants to sell the ward's car to pay facility expenses. What records and court or counsel guidance should be gathered before sale?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. What rule of practice should guide a careful guardian during Module 5. Property, inventory, budgets, restricted accounts, and asset protection?

2. Which answer best identifies the governing authority for this module?

3. Which action would most likely undermine the guardian's duty?

4. Which documentation package best connects the authority, action, and outcome?

5. When should the guardian slow down before taking action?

6. What is the most review-ready response to the scenario?

7. Which authority reference belongs in the reviewer crosswalk?

8. Which testing control keeps this module from becoming a memorization exercise?

Module 6. Annual plans, habilitation plans, reports, and accountings

60 minutes

Annual guardianship plans, habilitation plans, care updates, annual reports, accountings, deadlines, and documentation.

Required coverage: Covers preparation of habilitation plans and annual guardianship reports, including financial accounting for ward property.

Guardians learn that reporting is not a paperwork afterthought. It is how the court supervises the guardianship and checks whether the ward's needs, rights, health, residence, finances, and services are being handled appropriately.

The module explains care plans and habilitation plans at a practical level: current residence, medical care, mental health or disability supports, social activity, education or work where relevant, transportation, benefits, goals, and anticipated changes.

Financial-accounting content covers income, expenses, beginning and ending balances, receipts, supporting documents, explanations for major changes, and the need to reconcile account records before submission.

Participants build a monthly recordkeeping rhythm so annual filings can be completed accurately. The course tells guardians to follow the assigned circuit's forms, local rules, deadlines, and attorney instructions.

Some circuits add specific plan requirements. For example, the Sixth Judicial Circuit (Pasco and Pinellas) requires every INITIAL guardianship plan to include a Disaster Plan describing how the ward's special needs will be met during an evacuation, emergency order, or other emergency, updated whenever the ward permanently changes residence or a new guardian is appointed; a minor child residing with a parent or relative guardian is exempt (AO 2024-025, Section E). Guardians file all plans, accountings, and inventories on the circuit's court-approved forms and follow the computer-generated filing schedule issued with the Letters of Guardianship.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: F.S. 744.3675, F.S. 744.3678, and F.S. 744.3145 reporting topics. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: Unexplained withdrawals, missing statements, major care changes, or inability to complete the annual report accurately. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: Bank statements show unexplained withdrawals two weeks before the accounting is due. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Use a monthly recordkeeping rhythm so annual reports and accountings can be prepared from current documentation. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

Bank statements show unexplained withdrawals two weeks before the accounting is due.

Reviewer takeaway: Use a monthly recordkeeping rhythm so annual reports and accountings can be prepared from current documentation.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: Circuit forms, court orders, annual reporting rules, and attorney or clerk instructions.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Monthly care notes, residence updates, service changes, bank reconciliations, receipts, statements, and benefit notices.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: Unexplained withdrawals, missing statements, major care changes, or inability to complete the annual report accurately.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Reconstructing records at the deadline, omitting unexplained transactions, or filing inconsistent care and financial information.

Outcomes
  • Explain why annual reporting matters to court oversight.
  • Identify information included in care or habilitation plans.
  • Track financial records needed for accountings.
  • Follow circuit-specific forms and deadlines.
Review checks
  • What is one purpose of an annual guardianship report?
  • Name two items commonly included in a care or habilitation plan.
  • Why should accounting records be updated monthly?
  • Scenario: bank statements show several unexplained withdrawals before the annual accounting is due. What should the guardian do before filing?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. In Module 6. Annual plans, habilitation plans, reports, and accountings, which starting point best protects the ward and the court record?

2. Where should the guardian look before relying on family preference or habit?

3. What behavior would a reviewer expect the course to discourage?

4. What evidence should be kept before the annual report or accounting is prepared?

5. Which circumstance calls for documented guidance before the decision is made?

6. Which choice turns the scenario into proper guardian practice?

7. What source area ties this module to Florida guardian education?

8. What should the course do with answer order and retries after approval?

Module 7. Emergencies, changes, ethics, termination, and restoration

60 minutes

Emergency decision-making, changes in residence or condition, ethical boundaries, restoration of rights, resignation, successor guardians, and case closure.

Required coverage: Extends legal duties and rights-of-ward coverage with practical lifecycle decisions.

The module teaches guardians to recognize events that may require immediate action and later court notice: hospitalization, abuse, disappearance, death, major financial loss, change in residence, facility discharge, arrest, or sudden change in capacity or support.

Participants learn that guardianship can change. Rights may be restored, authority may be modified, a successor guardian may be needed, property may be exhausted, or the ward may die. Guardians must follow court procedure rather than informally walking away.

Ethics content covers confidentiality, respectful conduct, avoiding retaliation, responding to family conflict, keeping professional boundaries with paid caregivers, and protecting the ward's voice even when relatives disagree.

The lesson ends with a decision tree: emergency first, document facts, notify the appropriate people, ask counsel or the court when required, and preserve the ward's rights and property while waiting for direction.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: Chapter 744 lifecycle duties, restoration/modification concepts, and emergency reporting practice. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: Hospitalization, abuse, death, disappearance, major financial loss, residence change, restoration request, resignation, or successor need. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: The ward is unexpectedly hospitalized and relatives disagree about discharge and placement. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Handle immediate safety first, document facts, notify appropriate parties, and ask counsel or the court for the next step. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

The ward is unexpectedly hospitalized and relatives disagree about discharge and placement.

Reviewer takeaway: Handle immediate safety first, document facts, notify appropriate parties, and ask counsel or the court for the next step.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: Emergency circumstances, the guardianship order, court rules, counsel guidance, and required notices.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Incident facts, emergency contacts, facility notices, hospital updates, family communications, and court or attorney notifications.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: Hospitalization, abuse, death, disappearance, major financial loss, residence change, restoration request, resignation, or successor need.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Walking away from the role, hiding major changes, retaliating during family conflict, or ignoring restoration/modification procedures.

Outcomes
  • Respond appropriately to emergencies and major changes.
  • Understand that rights restoration or guardianship changes require court process.
  • Apply ethical boundaries during conflict.
  • Use a decision tree for urgent guardian decisions.
Review checks
  • Name one event that may require court notice or attorney guidance.
  • Can a guardian simply stop serving without court process?
  • What is one ethical boundary during family conflict?
  • Scenario: the ward is hospitalized unexpectedly and relatives disagree about discharge. What should the guardian document, and who should be notified?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. Before taking action in Module 7. Emergencies, changes, ethics, termination, and restoration, what principle should control?

2. Which source should the guardian verify before acting?

3. Which mistake would create the clearest guardianship risk here?

4. Which proof set would best support later court review?

5. What fact pattern should make the guardian stop and ask for guidance?

6. What should the learner do with the module scenario?

7. Which legal anchor should a reviewer associate with this lesson?

8. How should post-approval mastery checks operate for this module?

Module 8. Final review, court filing, certificate, and ongoing compliance

60 minutes

Course review, completion attestation, certificate handling, court filing instructions, ongoing education habits, and support resources.

Required coverage: Confirms completion of the 8-hour family guardian education track and reinforces all statutory topic areas.

The final module reviews the statutory topic areas: legal duties and responsibilities, rights of the ward, local resources, habilitation and annual reports, and financial accounting. Participants connect each topic to the documents they must maintain after appointment.

The lesson explains certificate handling. Depending on the circuit, the guardian, attorney, course provider, or clerk may have a specific filing responsibility. Participants are told to follow their order, attorney instructions, and local circuit procedure.

The course includes a completion attestation confirming that the participant completed the required track, reviewed the educational boundaries, and understands that the certificate is valid only where the circuit or chief judge accepts the provider.

The module closes with a personal compliance calendar: appointment date, four-month education deadline, inventory deadline, care-plan deadline, annual report deadline, accounting deadline, and support contacts.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: F.S. 744.3145 and circuit-specific certificate acceptance. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: Unclear certificate filing responsibility, missed education deadline, or uncertainty about local acceptance of the provider. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: The appointment date was six weeks ago and no education certificate has been filed. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Verify the applicable circuit's filing instruction and build a calendar keyed to appointment and reporting dates. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

The appointment date was six weeks ago and no education certificate has been filed.

Reviewer takeaway: Verify the applicable circuit's filing instruction and build a calendar keyed to appointment and reporting dates.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: F.S. 744.3145, circuit approval terms, the appointment order, and local certificate-filing instructions.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Course completion proof, certificate ID, verification URL, filing date, inventory due date, annual report due date, and support contacts.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: Unclear certificate filing responsibility, missed education deadline, or uncertainty about local acceptance of the provider.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Assuming a certificate is valid statewide or missing the four-month education and court-reporting deadlines.

Outcomes
  • Review all statutory topic areas before completion.
  • Understand certificate filing and acceptance limits.
  • Complete the course attestation accurately.
  • Build a guardianship compliance calendar.
Review checks
  • Name the main statutory topic areas covered in the 8-hour course.
  • Who controls whether a certificate is accepted for a circuit case?
  • Why should a guardian build a compliance calendar immediately?
  • Scenario: the appointment date was six weeks ago and no education certificate has been filed. What deadline should the guardian verify and what filings should be calendared next?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. Which choice keeps a guardian's decision in Module 8. Final review, court filing, certificate, and ongoing compliance inside the proper authority?

2. What should be checked before the guardian treats an action as authorized?

3. What conduct should the guardian avoid before it becomes a court problem?

4. What documentation would make the guardian's decision easiest to verify?

5. When is attorney or court guidance the safest next step?

6. Which response best handles the practical problem in this module?

7. What Florida guardianship authority is this module designed to reinforce?

8. What assessment practice best protects course integrity after launch?

4 hours / 240 minutes

4-hour guardian of minor-child property track

Parents appointed guardian of the property of a minor child

4 modules

Minor-property Module 1. Court role and guardian-of-property duties

60 minutes

Appointment for minor-child property, letters of guardianship, fiduciary duty, attorney/court communication, and scope limits.

Required coverage: Covers legal duties and responsibilities of the guardian of the property.

Parents appointed guardian of a minor child's property learn that the appointment is about protecting the child's assets, not expanding parental spending discretion. The court order and letters define what the guardian may do.

The lesson explains fiduciary loyalty, separation of funds, restricted accounts, counsel communication, and the need to document every decision involving the child's property.

Participants distinguish the everyday parental role from the court-supervised property role. A parent may make ordinary parenting decisions, but guardianship assets belong to the child and must be handled for the child's benefit under the court's limits.

The module closes with a first-week action list: read the appointment order, confirm the authorized accounts, identify required filings, ask counsel about restricted-account language, and create a recordkeeping folder for the child's property.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: F.S. 744.3145(3), minor-property guardianship duties, and court restrictions. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: Any proposed use of minor property for household expenses, caregiver reimbursement, or an expense not clearly authorized. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: A parent guardian wants to use settlement proceeds for rent because the child lives in the home. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Separate the parental role from the court-supervised property role and ask before spending. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

A parent guardian wants to use settlement proceeds for rent because the child lives in the home.

Reviewer takeaway: Separate the parental role from the court-supervised property role and ask before spending.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: The order appointing the parent guardian of property, letters of guardianship, and restricted-account instructions.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Appointment order, letters, restricted-account information, counsel instructions, and the property-duty checklist.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: Any proposed use of minor property for household expenses, caregiver reimbursement, or an expense not clearly authorized.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Treating child property as ordinary household money or assuming parental discretion controls restricted funds.

Outcomes
  • Explain the limited role of guardian of the property.
  • Recognize the fiduciary duty owed to the minor child.
  • Know when to ask attorney or court guidance.
Review checks
  • What does guardian of the property mean for a minor child?
  • Why must child funds be kept separate?
  • Scenario: a parent wants to use settlement proceeds for household rent because the child lives in the home. What authority and documentation should be checked before any payment?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. A guardian is starting work on Minor-property Module 1. Court role and guardian-of-property duties. What should come first?

2. Which authority source is safest when the next step is unclear?

3. Which choice is the unsafe shortcut this module warns against?

4. Which record trail belongs in the file for this module?

5. Which situation is a pause point rather than a proceed-now moment?

6. How should the guardian convert the scenario into a defensible next step?

7. Which citation family best matches the module's required coverage?

8. Which review-check design supports honest guardian learning?

Minor-property Module 2. Initial inventory and safeguarding assets

60 minutes

Initial inventory, asset sources, bank controls, settlement or inheritance proceeds, insurance, documentation, and restricted depository rules.

Required coverage: Covers initial inventory.

Participants learn to identify the source, value, location, and restrictions on each asset. Examples include settlement proceeds, insurance benefits, inherited funds, bank accounts, investment accounts, and tangible property.

The module teaches safeguarding practices: restricted accounts where ordered, no commingling, no informal loans, careful receipt retention, and court permission before significant transactions.

The inventory lesson emphasizes source documents, not estimates alone. Participants gather settlement orders, checks, account-opening forms, bank statements, insurance notices, probate or trust documents, title records, appraisals, and correspondence from counsel or the clerk.

Safeguarding also includes practical controls: using accounts titled for the guardianship, limiting debit-card or cash access, preserving mail and tax notices, monitoring statements, and documenting who has custody of physical property until the court authorizes a change.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: F.S. 744.3145(3), initial inventory requirements, and restricted-depository practice. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: A settlement check arrives before the restricted account is opened or an asset value/source is unclear. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: A settlement check arrives before the restricted account exists and a family member suggests depositing it into a personal account temporarily. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Hold funds safely under counsel guidance, open the correct account, and inventory from source documents. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

A settlement check arrives before the restricted account exists and a family member suggests depositing it into a personal account temporarily.

Reviewer takeaway: Hold funds safely under counsel guidance, open the correct account, and inventory from source documents.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: The court order, restricted depository requirements, settlement or inheritance documents, and clerk/counsel instructions.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Checks, settlement orders, account-opening forms, bank statements, title records, appraisals, insurance notices, and correspondence.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: A settlement check arrives before the restricted account is opened or an asset value/source is unclear.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Depositing funds into the wrong account, relying on estimates, losing source documents, or allowing informal access.

Outcomes
  • Prepare an accurate initial inventory.
  • Safeguard assets according to the order.
  • Avoid commingling or unauthorized use.
Review checks
  • What information belongs in an initial inventory?
  • Why are restricted accounts commonly used?
  • Scenario: a settlement check arrives before the restricted account is opened. What should the guardian do with counsel or the clerk before depositing or spending it?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. Which answer best reflects the core duty taught in Minor-property Module 2. Initial inventory and safeguarding assets?

2. What record or instruction controls the guardian's scope of action?

3. What is the most important risk to screen out in this lesson?

4. What should the guardian preserve so the action can be reviewed later?

5. What trigger should send the guardian back to counsel, the clerk, or the court?

6. Which action best resolves the scenario without exceeding authority?

7. What statutory or court-rule anchor supports this module?

8. How should the module bank be delivered when learners are enrolled?

Minor-property Module 3. Annual accounting and use of guardianship assets

60 minutes

Annual accounting, income, expenses, receipts, permissible spending, court approval, and child-benefit decision-making.

Required coverage: Covers annual guardianship accountings and use of guardianship assets.

The module explains that accountings show the court what came in, what went out, what remains, and why each transaction was made for the child's benefit. Records should be updated throughout the year instead of reconstructed at the deadline.

Participants review spending examples, including education, medical needs, equipment, housing-related expenses, transportation, and requests from family members. The lesson emphasizes that many uses require attorney guidance or court approval.

Annual accounting practice covers beginning balances, deposits, interest, dividends, reimbursements, expenses, transfers, ending balances, and supporting statements or receipts. The guardian learns to describe the purpose of each transaction so a reviewer can see why it benefited the minor.

The module also teaches restraint with family requests. Even sympathetic expenses can create problems if they benefit another household member, lack documentation, exceed the order, or should have been approved by the court before payment.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: F.S. 744.3145(3), annual accounting requirements, and fiduciary use-of-assets principles. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: Any unusual expense, family request, reimbursement, household expense, or transfer from a restricted account. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: A relative asks to borrow from the child's account and promises to repay after tax season. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Document the child-benefit purpose and seek approval before payment when the use is not routine and clearly authorized. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

A relative asks to borrow from the child's account and promises to repay after tax season.

Reviewer takeaway: Document the child-benefit purpose and seek approval before payment when the use is not routine and clearly authorized.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: Annual accounting forms, court orders, receipts, bank statements, and attorney/clerk instructions.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Beginning balances, deposits, interest, expenses, receipts, transfers, ending balances, and purpose notes.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: Any unusual expense, family request, reimbursement, household expense, or transfer from a restricted account.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Loaning child funds, paying undocumented expenses, or approving sympathetic family requests without court authority.

Outcomes
  • Track records needed for annual accountings.
  • Assess whether spending serves the child's interest.
  • Identify transactions needing approval before payment.
Review checks
  • What does an annual accounting show?
  • Why should a guardian ask before spending on unusual expenses?
  • Scenario: a relative asks to borrow from the child's account and promises to repay after tax season. What should the guardian say and document?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. What rule of practice should guide a careful guardian during Minor-property Module 3. Annual accounting and use of guardianship assets?

2. Which answer best identifies the governing authority for this module?

3. Which action would most likely undermine the guardian's duty?

4. Which documentation package best connects the authority, action, and outcome?

5. When should the guardian slow down before taking action?

6. What is the most review-ready response to the scenario?

7. Which authority reference belongs in the reviewer crosswalk?

8. Which testing control keeps this module from becoming a memorization exercise?

Minor-property Module 4. Completion review, certificate, and ongoing duties

60 minutes

Final review, certificate handling, deadlines, communication with attorney or clerk, and planning through the child's majority or court discharge.

Required coverage: Closes the 4-hour minor-property track and reinforces all required minor-property topics.

The final module reviews guardian-of-property duties, inventory, annual accounting, and use of assets. Participants assemble a compliance checklist keyed to their appointment date and local court instructions.

The course explains that certificate acceptance is circuit-specific. A certificate would identify the 4-hour minor-property track, delivery method, completion date, provider, and verification ID only after the chief judge or circuit accepts the provider.

Participants build an ongoing calendar for account statements, restricted-account reviews, tax or benefits notices, annual accounting drafts, attorney check-ins, and expected transition steps as the child approaches majority or a court discharge point.

The final exercise asks participants to review a sample minor-property case, identify the inventory items, flag two transactions that need approval, and write a short plan for keeping the child's funds separate and review-ready.

Statutory anchor for reviewer crosswalk: F.S. 744.3145(3), certificate acceptance, and closing/discharge practice. Learners are told to treat the statute, the appointment order, letters of guardianship, and local circuit procedures as the controlling sources before acting.

The module opens with a document check: appointment order, letters of guardianship, pending deadlines, attorney contact, court case number, and any restricted-depository or reporting instructions. Students are reminded that a course cannot expand authority beyond the court order.

A local-practice note directs learners to confirm their appointing circuit's filing instructions, court-approved guardianship forms, e-filing expectations, and division-specific procedures (Sixth Judicial Circuit forms and instructions are at www.jud6.org) instead of relying on a generic statewide form packet.

Decision point: The child approaches majority, funds remain restricted, or the guardian is unsure how to close or transition the case. This pause point is repeated as a practical rule because many guardian errors happen when a well-meaning family member acts first and asks the court later.

Worked scenario: The child turns 18 next year and funds remain in a restricted account. The learner identifies the authority source, the person affected, the record needed, and the safest next step before selecting an answer.

Recommended learner action: Calendar transition steps and confirm closing or discharge instructions before moving funds. The course presents this as a repeatable workflow rather than a one-time fact pattern.

Forms walk-through: the learner is shown how the topic connects to the case file, including where the fact would appear in an initial plan, annual plan, inventory, annual accounting, certificate packet, or correspondence log.

Recordkeeping walk-through: the module requires learners to identify the source document, date, person contacted, decision made, money or right affected, supporting receipt or note, and next deadline.

Rights-preservation checkpoint: before any restriction, payment, move, disclosure, or service change, the learner asks whether the action is authorized, necessary, least restrictive, documented, and centered on the person under guardianship.

Local-resource checkpoint: the learner must decide whether the issue belongs with the attorney, the probate division, the local Clerk of the Circuit Court, Adult Protective Services (Florida Abuse Hotline 1-800-962-2873), the local Area Agency on Aging Elder Helpline, 211, transportation services, a medical provider, or emergency services (911).

Common mistake review: the course calls out acting outside the letters, combining personal and guardianship funds, omitting receipts, waiting until the annual report to disclose a problem, and treating family consensus as a substitute for court authority.

Completion checkpoint: the module ends with a short no-stakes mastery check. In the production course after approval, questions should be randomly sampled, answer order should be shuffled, and the learner should retry until 80% mastery is reached.

Worked examples and scenarios
Worked scenario

The child turns 18 next year and funds remain in a restricted account.

Reviewer takeaway: Calendar transition steps and confirm closing or discharge instructions before moving funds.

Documentation walk-through

The reviewer should see how the guardian connects authority, action, and proof: The appointment order, circuit approval terms, certificate instructions, and closing/discharge procedures.

Reviewer takeaway: Keep this proof set current: Certificate proof, accounting calendar, restricted-account reviews, tax/benefit notices, and transition instructions.

When to pause

This module treats the pause point as a core professional habit: The child approaches majority, funds remain restricted, or the guardian is unsure how to close or transition the case.

Reviewer takeaway: Avoid this risk before acting: Assuming the duty ends automatically at course completion or failing to plan for the child's majority.

Outcomes
  • Review all required minor-property topics.
  • Understand certificate filing and acceptance limits.
  • Build a calendar for inventory, accounting, and court deadlines.
Review checks
  • What are the required topics in the 4-hour minor-property course?
  • Who controls whether the certificate is accepted?
  • Scenario: the child will turn 18 next year and funds remain in a restricted account. What should the guardian calendar and confirm before the court closes or transitions the case?
Interactive knowledge check

Select an answer to see instant feedback. After approval, these checks are randomly sampled, the option order is shuffled, mastery is set at 80%, and retries with feedback are allowed.

1. In Minor-property Module 4. Completion review, certificate, and ongoing duties, which starting point best protects the ward and the court record?

2. Where should the guardian look before relying on family preference or habit?

3. What behavior would a reviewer expect the course to discourage?

4. What evidence should be kept before the annual report or accounting is prepared?

5. Which circumstance calls for documented guidance before the decision is made?

6. Which choice turns the scenario into proper guardian practice?

7. What source area ties this module to Florida guardian education?

8. What should the course do with answer order and retries after approval?

Final assessment

Combined final-assessment question bank

This bank consolidates every module knowledge check across both tracks (96 items). After approval, the live final would randomly sample from this pool with shuffled options. Select an answer to see instant feedback.

1. Before taking action in Module 1. Guardian role, court authority, and least restrictive alternatives, what principle should control?

2. Which source should the guardian verify before acting?

3. Which mistake would create the clearest guardianship risk here?

4. Which proof set would best support later court review?

5. What fact pattern should make the guardian stop and ask for guidance?

6. What should the learner do with the module scenario?

7. Which legal anchor should a reviewer associate with this lesson?

8. How should post-approval mastery checks operate for this module?

9. Which choice keeps a guardian's decision in Module 2. Legal duties, fiduciary standards, and prohibited conduct inside the proper authority?

10. What should be checked before the guardian treats an action as authorized?

11. What conduct should the guardian avoid before it becomes a court problem?

12. What documentation would make the guardian's decision easiest to verify?

13. When is attorney or court guidance the safest next step?

14. Which response best handles the practical problem in this module?

15. What Florida guardianship authority is this module designed to reinforce?

16. What assessment practice best protects course integrity after launch?

17. A guardian is starting work on Module 3. Rights of the ward, dignity, participation, and communication. What should come first?

18. Which authority source is safest when the next step is unclear?

19. Which choice is the unsafe shortcut this module warns against?

20. Which record trail belongs in the file for this module?

21. Which situation is a pause point rather than a proceed-now moment?

22. How should the guardian convert the scenario into a defensible next step?

23. Which citation family best matches the module's required coverage?

24. Which review-check design supports honest guardian learning?

25. Which answer best reflects the core duty taught in Module 4. Care planning, health context, capacity, and local resources?

26. What record or instruction controls the guardian's scope of action?

27. What is the most important risk to screen out in this lesson?

28. What should the guardian preserve so the action can be reviewed later?

29. What trigger should send the guardian back to counsel, the clerk, or the court?

30. Which action best resolves the scenario without exceeding authority?

31. What statutory or court-rule anchor supports this module?

32. How should the module bank be delivered when learners are enrolled?

33. What rule of practice should guide a careful guardian during Module 5. Property, inventory, budgets, restricted accounts, and asset protection?

34. Which answer best identifies the governing authority for this module?

35. Which action would most likely undermine the guardian's duty?

36. Which documentation package best connects the authority, action, and outcome?

37. When should the guardian slow down before taking action?

38. What is the most review-ready response to the scenario?

39. Which authority reference belongs in the reviewer crosswalk?

40. Which testing control keeps this module from becoming a memorization exercise?

41. In Module 6. Annual plans, habilitation plans, reports, and accountings, which starting point best protects the ward and the court record?

42. Where should the guardian look before relying on family preference or habit?

43. What behavior would a reviewer expect the course to discourage?

44. What evidence should be kept before the annual report or accounting is prepared?

45. Which circumstance calls for documented guidance before the decision is made?

46. Which choice turns the scenario into proper guardian practice?

47. What source area ties this module to Florida guardian education?

48. What should the course do with answer order and retries after approval?

49. Before taking action in Module 7. Emergencies, changes, ethics, termination, and restoration, what principle should control?

50. Which source should the guardian verify before acting?

51. Which mistake would create the clearest guardianship risk here?

52. Which proof set would best support later court review?

53. What fact pattern should make the guardian stop and ask for guidance?

54. What should the learner do with the module scenario?

55. Which legal anchor should a reviewer associate with this lesson?

56. How should post-approval mastery checks operate for this module?

57. Which choice keeps a guardian's decision in Module 8. Final review, court filing, certificate, and ongoing compliance inside the proper authority?

58. What should be checked before the guardian treats an action as authorized?

59. What conduct should the guardian avoid before it becomes a court problem?

60. What documentation would make the guardian's decision easiest to verify?

61. When is attorney or court guidance the safest next step?

62. Which response best handles the practical problem in this module?

63. What Florida guardianship authority is this module designed to reinforce?

64. What assessment practice best protects course integrity after launch?

65. A guardian is starting work on Minor-property Module 1. Court role and guardian-of-property duties. What should come first?

66. Which authority source is safest when the next step is unclear?

67. Which choice is the unsafe shortcut this module warns against?

68. Which record trail belongs in the file for this module?

69. Which situation is a pause point rather than a proceed-now moment?

70. How should the guardian convert the scenario into a defensible next step?

71. Which citation family best matches the module's required coverage?

72. Which review-check design supports honest guardian learning?

73. Which answer best reflects the core duty taught in Minor-property Module 2. Initial inventory and safeguarding assets?

74. What record or instruction controls the guardian's scope of action?

75. What is the most important risk to screen out in this lesson?

76. What should the guardian preserve so the action can be reviewed later?

77. What trigger should send the guardian back to counsel, the clerk, or the court?

78. Which action best resolves the scenario without exceeding authority?

79. What statutory or court-rule anchor supports this module?

80. How should the module bank be delivered when learners are enrolled?

81. What rule of practice should guide a careful guardian during Minor-property Module 3. Annual accounting and use of guardianship assets?

82. Which answer best identifies the governing authority for this module?

83. Which action would most likely undermine the guardian's duty?

84. Which documentation package best connects the authority, action, and outcome?

85. When should the guardian slow down before taking action?

86. What is the most review-ready response to the scenario?

87. Which authority reference belongs in the reviewer crosswalk?

88. Which testing control keeps this module from becoming a memorization exercise?

89. In Minor-property Module 4. Completion review, certificate, and ongoing duties, which starting point best protects the ward and the court record?

90. Where should the guardian look before relying on family preference or habit?

91. What behavior would a reviewer expect the course to discourage?

92. What evidence should be kept before the annual report or accounting is prepared?

93. Which circumstance calls for documented guidance before the decision is made?

94. Which choice turns the scenario into proper guardian practice?

95. What source area ties this module to Florida guardian education?

96. What should the course do with answer order and retries after approval?

Certificate preview

Sample certificate — for reviewer inspection only

This is a sample only. Real certificates remain disabled until the course is accepted by the applicable circuit or chief judge.

Certificate of Completion

Florida Family Guardian Education Course

Awarded to
[Participant Name]
Certificate ID (8-hour)
FL-FGE-8H-2026-0001
Certificate ID (4-hour minor property)
FL-FGE-MP-2026-0001
Verification
nationalcourseportal.com/verify/FL-FGE-8H-2026-0001
Status
Sample for review — enrollment closed
Provider
Driver Course Platform LLC d/b/a National Course Portal
Fields included
Guardian legal name
Court case number if provided by participant or counsel
Ward initials or nonpublic case reference if allowed by the circuit
Track completed: 8-hour family guardian or 4-hour minor-property guardian
Track-specific certificate prefix: FL-FGE-8H for 8-hour family/nonprofessional guardian, FL-FGE-MP for 4-hour minor-property guardian
Completion date
Delivery method: online, live-online, or hybrid as approved
Provider: Driver Course Platform LLC d/b/a National Course Portal
Instructor and SME credentials as approved by the circuit
Circuit approval reference once granted
Certificate ID and public verification URL