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Paperback Social Work: Seeking Relevancy in the Twenty-First Century Book

ISBN: 078901050X

ISBN13: 9780789010506

Social Work: Seeking Relevancy in the Twenty-First Century

Discover why social work must be restructured if it is to remain viable Social Work: Seeking Relevancy in the Twenty-First Century provides you with a critical examination of the major issues that social work education and practice must confront if social work is to remain as a mainline profession. The book explores issues that are not normally covered in social work literature, such as the challenge of reconstructing the social work profession, the use of technology in social work, and the tension surrounding various social work education curriculums. You will benefit from this thorough discussion of the many problems that the social work profession is facing: a lack of scholarly research, inadequate educational programs, and the use of hypertechnology to educate social work students.Social Work: Seeking Relevancy in the Twenty-First Century examines the epistemological, theoretical, socio/technical, and practice directions that social work has branched into. You'll discover that today's central direction for social work is generated from liberal, postmodern, and increasingly feminist ideological perspectives. In a field where conceptual and theoretical input rarely allow for intellectual diversity, this volume demonstrates that several views are best for inquiry and exploration in social work.Issues discussed include:

examining real or unreal social work values by separating them from beliefs, preferences, norms, attitudes, and opinions creating social work course outlines that incorporate practices developed around the globe, allowing for more conceptual and theoretical growth within the field realizing the tremendous difference between communication in the instrumental sense via technology, and in the affective, soul-oriented sense via personal interaction investigating the negative effects of communicating with hypertechnology (modems, e-mail) in the social work profession realizing the need for a greater quantity and quality of social work research to progress further in the field

Social Work: Seeking Relevancy in the Twenty-First Century invites you to reinvent social work for today's post-industrial and post-modern era. You will discover a series of challenges that social work must meet and overcome if it is to move into the new century as a relevant and viable profession. You will explore solutions such as increasing scholarship and research among social workers, and decreasing the use of technology (for example, classes held via the Internet) in social work education programs in order to increase the quality of the social work profession.

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Customer Reviews

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The courage to say what must be said....

The ecological model is a philosophy, not an emperically vallidated theory. Social work has a troubled relationship with science. It's pretty easy to get into graduate school in social work. Our scholarship is of questionable quality. As a profession we are not taken seriously on issues that are important to us. These and other disturbing truths about social work are brought forth in this volume with clarity and force. This book critically examines the dominant theories in social work, the gatekeeping and educational models in social work training, and the scope of social work practice at the beginning of the 21st century. In doing so it points out many of the weaknesses of organized social work, which after 100 years still struggles with issues of professional ideantity, uniformity of training, and common philosophy. While quite critical of many aspects of the profession, these authors clearly care about social work. Their criticism is not merely indictment, but suggests action. This book is not a wakeup call, because the issues are well known. Rather it is a challenge to us as a profession. We can not improve the state of things unless we have the courage to critically self examine ourselves and take action. This book articulates the issues better than anything else I've come across. Like a true friend, it tells you what you may not want to hear, but what you know is right.
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