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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
191

Oregon Chapter, National Association of Social Workers : membership study

Brewer, Gale, Hayashida, Leslie, Lam, Kathy, Navarro, Adrian 01 January 1979 (has links)
The purpose of this practicum is to present a descriptive analysis of possible causes related to the drop-out rate in the Oregon Chapter, National Association of Social Workers (NASW) during the period between March of 1977 to March of 1978. Initial interest and involvement for this practicum was generated by a classroom announcement from Norman L. Wyers, D.S.W., Associate Professor at Portland State University School of Social Work. The announcement indicated that the Oregon Chapter, NASW, was interested in studying this drop-out rate. Throughout this practicum, the Oregon Chapter, NASW will be referred to as the Chapter.
192

Ideals, myths and realities : a postmodern analysis of moral-ethical decision-making and professional ethics in social work practice

Asquith, Merrylyn January 2003 (has links)
This thesis critically analyses how social work practitioners construct moral-ethical decision-making in systems that are constituted as legal-rational authority and political-socioeconomic interests. Notions of moral-ethicality in practice are represented in social work literature and codified ethics in certain ways and this thesis argues that such representations do not conceive of ways in which the claimed ideals of social work might be achieved in the face of structural oppressions and power imbalance that facilitate disadvantage. A notion that there are possibilities for challenge and resistance by social work practitioners to the power of cultural pedagogy that is inherent in the discursive field of social work is articulated. This is a critical postmodern work with a postmodern approach and this thesis is premised on the works of Zygmunt Bauman, and his perspectives on morality, ethics, responsibility for the Other and power relations. / Thesis (PhD)--University of South Australia, 2003
193

The universities and social welfare education in a post-industrial society

Cameron, Helen, n/a January 1995 (has links)
How we think about universities, their purposes and about the place of postcompulsory education in our society is the exemplification of a number of attitudes about humanity and life in general. Perceptions about the place of tertiary or postcompulsory education in the life of the ordinary person have changed along with a broader sweep of changes in the way people view themselves in relations to the world. The meaning of education in general and in particular, that of tertiary or postcompulsory education in the life of people today occupies a very different one to that of as little as forty or thirty years ago. The recent movements in the policies and processes surrounding the structure, form and purpose of higher education in Australia signifies to some extent at least the depth of these shifts in perceptions. In the field of social welfare education changes in political and social attitudes have led to calls for increased accountability in standards of practice in both service delivery and professional education, yet this call has come at a time of change in the cultural climate where there is decreasing clarity about what is expected of social welfare as a service, and of education for professional practice in the area. This thesis contends that the practice of and education for social work and social welfare stand in an invidious position in the current society in that practitioners and teachers, agencies and universities are being called on to be more accountable both philosophically and pragmatically, but that at the same time as this call for accountability presses upon the profession, questions are also being asked about the value basis of professional practice. Criticisms are being levied at the profession some suggesting that it is ideologically bound and ineffective in dealing with social problems seen to be within its scope of contribution to society. With justification these same criticism are being aimed at social work and welfare training programs with suggestions that contend that the education of people to work in the social welfare sector is at a cross-roads. Unless a reassessment of the goals and purposes of education for this field takes place it may lose all social status and relevance, yet there are those who suggest that change is long overdue and that there has been little change in the philosophy and practice of social welfare education The thesis has a primary contention that training people to work as social workers and other professional providers of social welfare in the current society is being placed under the microscope as a consequence of a number of movements in educational and political thought that have had their culmination in the competency movement that has impacted on both tertiary education, the professions and the industries. The institutions in which this training or education takes place have been changed in form and function particularly since 1989, following the Dawkins restructuring of the tertiary education sector and the account of these changes provides a backdrop for the story about social welfare education in Australia. These changes have included the construction of a national training platform with the espoused intention of formulating a seamless web of credentialling linking schools, the workplace, industry based training, DeTAFE and universities. The introduction of Competency Based Education, where training is asked to demonstrate a higher level of accountability and transparency than has been the case in the past, and the introduction of higher, sharper demands for effectiveness and relevance have shaken the universities out of comfortable complacency. In particular the competency movement has placed demands on the professions to demonstrate that they are able to describe their skills, roles and functions in accessible and assessable terms. This demand has also been placed on the social welfare profession. The requirement for the social welfare profession to formulate competencies has thrown into sharp relief an ideologically bound framework of practice that is seen to be out of touch with the needs of the current society, and this has had direct relevance for the education programs preparing people to practice in these areas. Chapter One focuses on views of knowledge and education and goes on to critique the changes in higher education that have occurred over the last half-century in Australia in general and in South Australia in particular, specifically in reference to the programs for educating social welfare workers. This chapter is largely historical, but this history is told with more of an appreciation of the spectacle of history's passing or recycling parade rather than of social progress. Chapter Two addresses the impact and significance of the structural and policy changes within the higher education sector with a particular focus on the competency movement as a demonstration of one of the currently perceived purposes of education. Chapter Three explores responses to the competency movement as further indicators of the views about the purposes of higher education in general and their relevance to those teaching with the social work and social welfare programs. Chapter Four locates voices in the discourse about the social welfare field, the type of work involved in the area, the sort of training needed, and the dilemmas inherent in the profession in the current society. This chapter highlights the need for a consensus position to support the formulation of standards for practice as implied in the design of competencies, and the ramifications of the lack of such consensus. Chapter Five displays the state of disarray in the profession through the analysis of the draft competencies produced so far, where lack of vision and consensus are seen, in the final reckoning, as the stumbling blocks to future clarity of purpose. Of any profession, social welfare work is one of the most difficult to put into competency based form due to both the nature of the work and the lack of a consensus view of its primary goals and purposes, yet it is essential that this can be achieved given the impactful and intrusive nature of the work, and the push for accountability implicit in the competency movement. The thesis concludes with a statement of hope that clearer standards for practice can be formulated and that social welfare education and practice can re-configure to contribute relevantly to the current society.
194

Biståndshandläggare inom omsorgen om funktionshindrade - om komplexitet i en mångfacetterad yrkesroll

Suomi, Sarianna January 2008 (has links)
<p>The aim of this study is to explore the complexity of social workers professinal role in disability services in local municipalities. The study is based on qualitative interviews that took place in 5 local municipalities in the surroundings of Stockholm. I interviewed two social workers in every municipal. The theoretical point in the study is Roine Johanssons theory of streetlevel bureaucats´ discretion in the execution of their work and the limitations that comes from the organisation. The results in this study show that social workers are in a complex work situation between clients and the organisation they work for. Disability services are a multi-faced area and though the professionals have a substantial discretion in the execution of their work there are several limitations in the execution. The discretion is controlled by activities both from thr government and from the local municipality. The social worker is in a middle position in the organisation and has to choose between being loyal to the own organisation or show obedience to the laws.</p>
195

A study of perceived organizational support and organizational commitment among social workers in Integrated Family Service Centres /

Wong, Suk-ha, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M. Soc. Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 2006.
196

Att tvinga till förändring : socialsekreterares erfarenheter av tvångsvårdade ungdomar

Nyström, Johanna, Pettersson, Cecilia January 2010 (has links)
Uppsatsens syfte var att undersöka socialsekreterares erfarenheter av hur placeringar på låst institution inverkar på ungdomar. Våra frågeställningar var 1. Vilka faktorer har betydelse för placerade ungdomars sociala utveckling? 2. På vilket sätt kan tvång motivera till positiv social utveckling? Studien har en hermeneutisk vetenskapsfilosofisk position med kvalitativ ansats och vår empiri bygger på intervjuer med fyra socialsekreterare. Resultatet analyserades utifrån livsmodellen, en ekologisk systemteori. Vad som framkommit är att ungdomen påverkas av den struktur som råder på låst institution samt av de relationer den omger sig med, vilka i sin tur också påverkar den sociala utvecklingen. För att den sociala utvecklingen skall utmynna i ett positivt resultat krävs det dock att den unge är motiverad till förändring, vilket kan uppkomma genom goda relationer och tydlig struktur. Motivation till förändring är överordnat rådande struktur och goda relationer, dock är dessa ett stöd för att nå den inre viljan till förändring. / The purpose of this thesis was to review social workers experiences of the effects on adolescents in compulsory care. We formulated the following questions to answer to the purpose: 1. What factors are important for the adolescents in custodial care and their social development? 2. In what way can coercion motivate a positive social development? The study was based on the theory of hermeneutics with a qualitative approach and our empirics were based on interviews with four social workers. The result was analyzed using the Life Model, an ecological systemic theory. It has been shown that the adolescent is affected by the structure that is present in custodial care as well as the relationships formed during the placement which in turn can affect the social development. The adolescent needs to feel motivated to achieve a positive social development and this motivation may arise from healthy relationships and a distinct structure. It is necessary for a person to be motivated to change in order for that change to occur. Healthy relationships and the right institutional structures can assist a person in this regard.
197

Die ondersteunende rol van die maatskaplike werker aan die jeugwerker wat met die adolessent binne kerkverband werk

Mattheus, Lizette. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M. Soc. Diligentiae)--University of Pretoria, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 169-178).
198

Professionalization and social justice in social work : discourses in conflict /

Olson, Jeffrey J. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2001. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 367-387).
199

Dimensions of creativity in generalist social work practice : constructions and retiring practitioners /

Turner, Linda, January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Memorial University of Newfoundland, 2002. / Bibliography: leaves 157-169.
200

Advancing in one's calling : the roles of internal labor markets and social capital in human services career plateauing /

Haley-Lock, Anna. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, School of Social Service Administration, December 2003. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.

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