Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Miscellaneous Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Introduction
- One What is social work research?
- Two Why do research in social work?
- Three Doing research application
- Four Mapping social work research
- Five Social work research over time
- Six Place and space
- Seven Sociological social work: a case example
- Eight Doing good social work research
- References
- Index
Three - Doing research application
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 April 2022
- Frontmatter
- Miscellaneous Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Introduction
- One What is social work research?
- Two Why do research in social work?
- Three Doing research application
- Four Mapping social work research
- Five Social work research over time
- Six Place and space
- Seven Sociological social work: a case example
- Eight Doing good social work research
- References
- Index
Summary
We begin this chapter by developing several ways in which social work can be understood as being concerned with applying what we know. I will aim to show that the question of ‘application’ is more difficult than we often realise. We then will work through recent discussions of the meaning and importance of the ‘impact’ of research. Moving on from there we will take as a social work example the question of doing ‘practitioner research’. We will learn more about the nature of practitioner research in the next chapter. In this chapter, the emphasis will be on what we know about the experience of doing practitioner research. The opening part of the chapter is the most difficult so it may help to jump to the section on the impact of research and come back to this opening part after finishing the rest of the chapter.
In a very broad sense, social work research is the application of research methods to solve problems that social workers confront in the practice of social work. It provides information that can be taken into consideration by social workers prior to making decisions that affect their clients, programmes or agencies such as use of alternative intervention techniques or change or modification of programme/client/objectives and so forth.
A definition of social work research in terms such as these will be taken almost as a given. It is about the application of methods and information for the solving of problems in the lives of those with whom social work practitioners work from day to day. To hesitate or seem to cast doubt appears almost a betrayal. In one such act of apparent disloyalty, Noel Timms confessed his ‘delineation of social work as concerned with understanding rather than information, and understanding not necessarily with a “practical” or predetermined end in view’ (Timms, 1972, pp 1-2). ‘We should consider social work as primarily neither an applied science nor simple good works but a kind of practical philosophising’ (p 3). Recognising the serious intent that lies behind Timms’ remarks, we explore how ‘practice’, and the process of applying what we know, is more difficult than we may expect.
Practice
The American sociologist C. Wright Mills bequeathed a notable – well, notorious – critique of social pathologists, among whom he numbered social workers (Mills, 1943).
- Type
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- Information
- Research and the Social Work Picture , pp. 39 - 60Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2018