ch 1 overview of social work. review history of social work definition of generalist practice...
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CH 1 OVERVIEW OF SOCIAL WORK
REVIEW
History of Social Work
Definition of Generalist Practice
Purpose & Mission of Social Work
Social Work Theories: Systems & Ecological Perspective
Generalist Intervention Model Overview
HISTORY OF SOCIAL WORK….. Outstanding social leaders in 1800s and early 1900s worked to bring innovative solutions to social conditions. Basically, governmental responses were ill-equipped to handle problems of the poor, mentally ill, immigration, housing and child welfare systems as our nation was growing and changing. Private and religious entities stepped up to help, and Social Work was born.
Began with group work, advocacy, and social activism, social leadership as they began to evoke change on personal and broad spectrum. Birth of settlement houses, YMCA, YWCA, Girl Scouts, Red Cross, Jewish Community Centers. First organizations were called Association for the Improvement of the Condition of the Poor and Children’s Aid Society.
Mostly upper-class women and men from faith-based or secular groups performed social work. Following Civil War, industrial growth caused social needs to arise (mini Depressions, racism, discrimination, immigration).
HISTORY CONT’D 1877 American Charity Organization Society (COS) was born to address issues on large scale. Enter cultural diverse needs = desire for more personalized services by own people.
Birth of Settlement Houses (1889- Hull House, Chicago): focused on environmental causes of poverty and employment concerns for poor; research; established juvenile court system; widow’s pension, addressed legislative issues on child labor, health care reform, and social insurance, women’s rights, civil rights = GROUP WORK/COMMUNITY ORGANIZATION
Individual case work vs. Group Work MICRO & MACRO PRACTICE
Columbia University had first School of Social Work in early 1900s (MSW)
SW shifted into practice-based models in 1910s and its “branch” flourished…
WW2, Great Depression, Roosevelt’s New Deal-explosion of social needs and services
CSWE 1952, NASW 1955 SOCIAL WORK!!!
1960s War on Poverty Pres. Johnson—Head Start, Economic Opportunity Act, Job Corps, Neighborhood Youth Corps, Community Action, Food Stamps, Elem/Secondary School Education Act, Peace Corps, VISTA
1970s Nixon/Ford/Carter eras—Social Security Amendments, focus on welfare dependency, child abuse, increase of poverty numbers, cultural awareness, gender awareness, BSW degree, growth of private practice, block grants to curb state expenditures on social services
1980s Reagan—social programs reduced or frozen, reliance on private organizations, tax increases, poverty numbers increased, war on drugs, HIV/AIDS epidemic, domestic violence, homelessness
1990s Clinton—TANF shift from feds to state control, put emphasis on private sector services, low coverage for health care for kids, baby boomers aging, prescription drug costs increasing, welfare reform, schools of SW increased research on mental health, aging, domestic violence and child welfare
http://ssw.umich.edu/about/history/brief-history-of-social-work
KEY PLAYERS IN EARLY SOCIAL WORK
Jane Addams
Florence Kelley
Ellen Gates Starr
Dorothea Dix
Abraham Lincoln
Samuel Gridley Howe
Ida M. Cannon
Grace Abbott
Grace Coyle
Mary Ellen Richmond
Eleanor Roosevelt
WHAT IS GENERALIST PRACTICE?The application of an eclectic knowledge base of professional values, and a wide range of skills to target systems of any size for change. Emphasis on client empowerment, working within organizational structures, wide range of roles, and utilizing effective critical thinking skills to plan change
PURPOSE AND MISSION OF SOCIAL WORK Enhance the problem solving and coping capacities of people
Link people with systems that provide them with resources, services, and opportunities
Promote the effective and humane operation of these systems
Contribute to the development and improvement of social policy
ROLES OF GENERALIST PRACTICE
Counselor/ Therapist
Educator
Broker
Case Manager
Mobilizer
Mediator
Facilitator
Advocate
Spokesperson
Organizer
Consultant
Supervisor
BIG SOCIAL WORK CONCEPTS
Target Systems (Figure 1.2, p. 9)
Micro Individual
Mezzo Families, Small Groups
Macro Communities, Organizations
Systems Theory- the “parts” of a whole- work together in relationship for a function- ex. car
Ecological Perspective- how organisms adapt to their environment-person-in-environment, coping, transactions- living & dynamic interactions
******Group Eco-Map**********
Generalist Intervention Model (GIM)
Goal: to empower change through a 7-step planned change model
CRITICAL THINKING AND PLANNED CHANGE
What is critical thinking? Ask questions Be inquisitive about how interventions work & their effectiveness Examine & evaluate statements Use scientific reasoning
“Critical thinkers question what others take for granted.” (Gambrill and Gibbs, 2009)
What is planned change?Development & implementation of a strategy for improving or altering “some specified conditioning, pattern of behavior, or set of circumstances that affect social functioning.”
GENERALIST INTERVENTION MODEL
1. Engagement
2. Assessment
3. Planning
4. Implementation
5. Evaluation
6. Termination
7. Follow-up
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