Learning points
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 September 2022
Summary
• Theoretical knowledge and clarity is essential, but theory needs to be applied intelligently, sensitively and flexibility.
• Skilled and appropriate supervision is crucial, as is time for a reflective discussion between workers.
• The power of the worker should always be recognised and acknowledged, as should the worker's own value system.
• Involvement of the worker always changes the family's system.
• Anyone who plays a part in the problem system can be as much a part of the system as the family is.
• Changes in the professional system or decision making often reflect shifts in the family system.
• Workers always need to be aware of issues of race, culture, gender and other difference.
• Such differences become structured in terms of power and need to be located and understood, for example gender roles within families.
• Clarification and development of appropriate boundaries can promote change.
• There is value in introducing a different approach in long-term work in order to promote change. Workers as well as families can become stuck.
• Joint or co-work can be a helpful and economic method to promote change.
• The dynamics of the family may be acutely experienced in the cowork relationship.
• Assessment and working with families to promote change sometimes needs to be distinct activities, although there is commonly an element of each in the other.
• The dilemmas for a social worker carrying a dual role, for example child protection and family problem solving, need careful consideration. The roles may not always be compatible.
• The social worker's position of neutrality is a complex matter in relation to agency function.
• Monitoring personal responses to the work is an important component of reflective practice.
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- Information
- Developing Reflective PracticeMaking Sense of Social Work in a World of Change, pp. 197 - 198Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2000