821 resultados para Social Work Practice
Exploration des changements identitaires : le cas des travailleuses sociales ayant immigré au Québec
Resumo:
Les travailleurs sociaux immigrants vivent plusieurs défis après l’obtention de la reconnaissance de leurs acquis au Québec par l’Ordre des travailleurs sociaux et des thérapeutes conjugaux et familiaux du Québec (OTSTCFQ. À partir de données extraites d’entretiens menés dans le cadre d’une recherche de plus grande envergure dirigée par Pullen-Sansfaçon, Brown et Graham (Recherche qualitative sur l'expérience des migrants et leur adaptation professionnelle dans la pratique du travail social au Canada, 2012-2015), nous explorons le sentiment d’identité professionnelle vécu par 9 travailleuses sociales immigrantes à Montréal. Ce sentiment apparaît comme l’actualisation de leurs valeurs et de leurs acquis professionnels dans leurs nouveaux rôles et leurs pratiques professionnelles. L’analyse des données permet de dégager divers thèmes en lien avec l’identité professionnelle de ces travailleuses sociales immigrantes. Nous avons pu relever de leurs propos que, depuis leur immigration, divers changements ont effectivement eu lieu au niveau de leurs pratiques professionnelles, voire de leur vision de la profession. Elles ont dû faire face à plusieurs défis liés à l’identité professionnelle, notamment en ce qui concerne la reconnaissance professionnelle et la langue. Trois éléments ont en effet formé la pierre angulaire des changements que ces travailleuses sociales ont vécus dans leur identité professionnelle depuis leur immigration : les valeurs, la question de la langue et la reconnaissance de leurs qualifications.
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This paper addresses the issue of adolescent pregnancy in Mexico, Central America and South Carolina and implications for social work practice with immigrant communities. The paper is based on current literature and on cross-national, on-line survey of local and international pregnancy prevention programs. The paper analyzes and discusses various psychosocial causes of pregnancy in adolescents, including: limited opportunities for formal education, infrequent open discussions about sexual health, rising costs of adequate birth control, and difficulty in obtaining contraceptives in remote locations. This research paper analyzes current statistics on the effectiveness of existing projects and programs and compares and contrasts research about the validity and efficacy of these programs in both South Carolina and abroad. Finally, the paper addresses implications for social work practice with adolescents in immigrant communities.
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This paper focuses first on cultural syncretism, used to characterize Brazilian culture. The other aspect of this socially and racially blended culture is the unfinished assimilation of liberalism in politics and the economy, which defines Brazilian society. The increased assimilation and dissemination of psychology may be linked with these in cultural and social aspects. During the military period (1964-1974) the major expansion in university-level studies in psychology contributed ideologically to the dissemination of psychology throughout Brazilian society. This introduced a type of psychology that was related primarily to clinical practice and developed in opposition to social work practice. This paper examines the ideological bases for this conflict between clinical and social work. Criteria for understanding the cultural dissemination of psychoanalysis are then discussed, and it is argued that cultural incorporation of psychoanalysis involves the development of discourse complexes to reflect particular aspects of Brazilian society. The criteria (a non-totalitarian society and the displacement of a magical and religious interpretation of mental disturbance by psychiatric interpretation) are evaluated in relation to the peculiarities of Brazilian syncretism. The paper argues that cultural syncretism and the incomplete assimilation of liberal ideology must be included as criteria in understanding the particular cultural incorporation of psychoanalysis in Brazil.
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Habitusbildung im Studium der Sozialpädagogik. Eine explorative Studie zur Strukturtypik studentischer Professionalisierungsprozesse Die qualitativ-empirische Studie untersucht die als studentischen und pädagogischen Habitus bezeichnete pädagogische Professionalisierung im Studium. Das zugrunde gelegte strukturtheoretische Modell einer professionalisierten sozialpädagogischen Praxis ist eine widersprüchliche Einheit von Theorie- und Fallverstehen. Schütze (1996) analysiert das im Kern paradoxale Verhältnis zwischen Professionellen und Klientel, die widersprüchliche Handlungslogik der Profession und die Konsequenzen ihrer herrschaftlicher Kontexte. In Oevermanns Skizze einer revidierten Theorie professionalisierten Handelns (1996) werden wissenschaftliches Verstehen und hermeneutisches Fallverstehen zur Grundlage des professionalisierten Handelns. Von besonderer Bedeutung ist Oevermanns Konzeption der stellvertretenden Deutung, der Deutung des latenten Sinns einer Interaktion, einer Handlung, einer latenten Sinnstrukur. Aus objektiv-hermeneutischer Sicht sind die Handlungsspielräume einer je konkreten Lebenspraxis durch Regeln gesetzt, bereits die Welt sozialer Regeln bestimmt Möglichkeiten und Folgen einer Handlung, nicht erst die Lebenspraxis. Die Kontrastierung von vier Fallrekonstruktionen mündet in der Formulierung zweier Strukturtypen. Beim Strukturtyp 1, „Scheitern der Habitusformation durch Verweigerung von Emergenz“, wird eine auf ein, maximal zwei sozialpädagogische Handlungsfelder gerichtete Berufskonzeption ausgeformt. Neue Inhalte, die sich nicht widerspruchsfrei in dieses minimalistische Konzept sozialer Praxis integrieren lassen, werden abgewehrt. Das Strukturpotential, das in dieser krisenhaften Übergangssituation angesprochen wird mit dem Anspruch, neue perzeptions- und handlungsleitende Sinnstrukturen zu bilden, stagniert in biografisch bewährten Bearbeitungsstrategien. Für die Fallstrukturgesetzlichkeit des Strukturtyps 2, „Krisenbearbeitung und Transformation biografietypischer Strukturen“, ist ein hohes Potential, in einem Prozess der Emergenz Krisen durch neue Handlungs- und Sinnstrukturen zu lösen, signifikant. Die gelingende Habitusformation vollzieht sich dort, wo diese emergenten Strukturen in die Vermitteltheit einer professionalisierten Routine überführt werden. Die Rückbindung der Strukturtypen an die Studienmodelle des „wissenschaftlich gebildeten Praktikers“ und des fallrekonstruktiven Modells fundiert die These, dass der durch die Einsozialisation in ein hermeneutisches Fallverstehen eröffnete Bildungsprozess vertiefte Kenntnisse um Lebensgesetzlichkeiten, Regelkenntnisse und eine entmystifizierte Haltung zur Theorie als einer „verwissenschaftlichten Rationalität“ vermittelt.
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Starting with the premise that extended family members often have great influence on family functioning, this article describes social work practice techniques for helping families utilize resources available in the extended family network. Two key concepts are presented: "parenting pioneers," who, while attempting newly learned parenting skills, may struggle with resistance from extended family members; and "parenting teams," in which the focal family is giving to or receiving from extended family members substantial family support. The article presents these practice techniques in the context of family support services, which are characterized as voluntary, preventive, developmental, and based in the concept of empowerment and the ecological perspective.
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Review of: Social Work Practice with Children Nancy Boyd Webb. New York: The Guilford Press. Reviewed by Lois Wright
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-06
Resumo:
The study aimed to examine the factors influencing referral to rehabilitation following traumatic brain injury (TBI) by using social problems theory as a conceptual model to focus on practitioners and the process of decision-making in two Australian hospitals. The research design involved semi-structured interviews with 18 practitioners and observations of 10 team meetings, and was part of a larger study on factors influencing referral to rehabilitation in the same settings. Analysis revealed that referral decisions were influenced primarily by practitioners' selection and their interpretation of clinical and non-clinical patient factors. Further, practitioners generally considered patient factors concurrently during an ongoing process of decision-making, with the combinations and interactions of these factors forming the basis for interpretations of problems and referral justifications. Key patient factors considered in referral decisions included functional and tracheostomy status, time since injury, age, family, place of residence and Indigenous status. However, rate and extent of progress, recovery potential, safety and burden of care, potential for independence and capacity to cope were five interpretative themes, which emerged as the justifications for referral decisions. The subsequent negotiation of referral based on patient factors was in turn shaped by the involvement of practitioners. While multi-disciplinary processes of decision-making were the norm, allied health professionals occupied a central role in referral to rehabilitation, and involvement of medical, nursing and allied health practitioners varied. Finally, the organizational pressures and resource constraints, combined with practitioners' assimilation of the broader efficiency agenda were central factors shaping referral. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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A qualitative study involving semi-structured interviews with 31 people with disabilities and 32 carers in the state of Queensland, Australia, found that their experience of supportive service delivery had not improved despite reforms of the service delivery system driven by a version of the quasi-market model. Instead of delivering increased consumer choice and improved efficiency in service delivery, service users experienced inadequate service supply, service cutbacks, and an increased emphasis on cost subsidisation and assessment processes. Additionally, few consumers felt that individualised funding arrangements had personally delivered the benefits which the quasi-market model and associated policy paradigm had indicated that they should receive. For many consumers, the notion of consumer 'choice' around service provision was fictitious and they felt that any efficiency gains were at the agency level, largely at the consumers' cost. It is concluded that there appears to be no particular benefit to service users of quasi-market reforms, particularly in policy contexts where service delivery systems are historically under-funded.
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This paper describes a number of techniques for facilitating reflective critical analysis as a means of eliciting in-depth reflections on practice. The authors have previously used similar techniques in the research context, to assist practitioners to identify and analyse the basis of their work with clients. The techniques presented in this paper have been adapted for use in social work education, including in class-based and field education contexts, and to professional supervision.
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Policy and social work practice currently lack a theoretical framework that adequately explains the emergence, diffusion, and continuance of the intercountry adoption (ICA) phenomenon. Using South Korea as a case study and the application of actor network theory to the ICA phenomenon, this paper introduces a theoretical approach that allows an examination of the complex interrelationships between the global and local influences of a country's engagement in ICA. This theoretical approach provides a different way of understanding the phenomenon, which, in turn, can better inform policies and practice that affect children and families across the globe.
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The purpose of this article is to overview the context of the mental health service in which we work, and family therapy's status prior to and after the impact of changes wrought by the introduction of the National Mental Health Policy. We then explore some key issues that we think contribute to the persistence of the occlusion of family therapy in child psychiatric services; and the strategies that we developed and are continuing to develop to support change, finally, we describe the use of a family assessment instrument that we believe is central to our change strategy.
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Given the seriousness of substance abuse as a child welfare problem, the purpose of this study was to examine the relative effectiveness of an inservice training curriculum for child welfare workers. The training was designed to improve worker knowledge and attitudes in working with substance abusing families. Seventy (70) child welfare workers from public and private agencies in two south Florida counties participated in a pretest/posttest control group design that also trained and retested the control group. The literature review supports that the general preparedness of child welfare workers for the issues presented by substance abusing families is in question. Confounding this problem is a lack of understanding of substance abuse dynamics, worker biases, and predispositions. The two research hypotheses focused on whether inservice training could increase worker knowledge and improve worker attitudes in working with this population. Training delivery was in the form of a five-day inservice focusing on an array of substance abuse knowledge and attitudinal topics. Separate knowledge and attitude instruments were developed for the research and were administered, before and after training, to a purposive sample of participants that were randomly assigned to the experimental and control groups. The data analysis supported the research hypotheses but raised a question. Specifically, the experimental group demonstrated significant improvement in posttest scores on both instruments after receiving the training; whereas the control group, with training withheld, also demonstrated a significant improvement at posttest, but only on the knowledge instrument. Although the question was unanswered, when examined at a more critical significance level, only the experimental group remained significant. The hypotheses were reconfirmed when, after training and retesting, the control group also displayed significant improvement on both instruments. The findings support the conclusion that this substance abuse inservice was effective in improving worker knowledge and attitudes regarding working with substance abusing families. As an implication for social work practice, it suggests that similar inservice training can be a viable training resource when formal substance abuse training is unavailable. Additional research is suggested regarding to what degree increased substance abuse knowledge and improved worker attitudes correlate with improved practice.