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Working With Individuals
Social Service Work
1
Working with Individuals &
Families
2
Individuals and Families…
3
Types of Service Users
Voluntary clients
People who have chosen to seek help from a social service
worker
Involuntary clients
Those who are legally obligated to accept services
(Hick, 2010, p. 83)
4
Social Service Work with Individuals
“People may be embedded in a web of connections with others
and with the institutions of society, but every life is
experienced uniquely, and its quality is determined solely by
the person living it (Jaco, 2002. p. 255)”.
5
Terminology
“Casework with individuals refers to a method of social work
intervention in which the worker intentionally creates a
helping relationship with a client that enables dialogue,
interaction, and influence to occur, with the purpose of
effecting positive changes in client thought feeling or action,
or in the social environment he or she inhabits (Jaco, 2002, p.
257)”.
6
Clinical Social Work
“a newer term for this same activity [casework], but one that
includes clearly linking clients to resources, coordinating
services, and advocacy (Swenson, 1995 as referenced in Jaco,
2002, p.257)”.
7
Direct Practice
Similar to above but “helping interventions at the micro-level
provided to individuals, couples, families, in contrast to indirect
or macro level practice which takes place at the community or
policy change (Jaco, 2002, p.257)
8
Therapy
“work in which social and psychological means are used to
enable individuals (single or in family or formed groups) to
cope with environmental, interpersonal and/or intrapsychic
dilemmas – and the interactions among these- that are
causing personal distress (Woods & Hollis, 1990 as quoted in
Jaco, 2002, p. 257)
9
Shared Elements (Jaco, 2002, p. 257)
Concern for internal and external life of the client
Concern for the manner in which these interact
Goal to strengthen the client to cope with pressures and
demands from within and without
Purpose of achieving a sound level of functioning
10
Goals
Improved:
• Self-esteem
• Social functioning
• Problem solving
• Analysis
11
Theory
“[A] theory is an attempt to explain. It is, in short, a framework
for understanding. It is a set of ideas linked together to help
make us make sense of particular issue or set of issues
(Thompson, 2000, p.22).”
12
Critical Self-Reflection (Hick, 2010, p. 97)
Critical self reflection – “knowledge about ones self
(Mullaly, 2002, as quoted in Hick, 2010, p.97)”
It is important for SSW to “understand how their
own identities, beliefs, and their professional and
personal lives are shaped by forces in society such
as the media, parental influence, educational
institutions and social structures (Hick, 2010, p.
97)?
13
Working with Families
14
Family
• Types of families - traditional, blended, single parent, same
sex, other….
• Family issues – divorce, separation, domestic violence, child
welfare, adoption
15
Definition of Family
The Vanier Institute of the Family defines “family” as:
Any combination of two or more persons who are bound
together over time by ties of mutual consent, birth and/or
adoption or placement and who, together, assume
responsibilities for variant combinations of some of the
following:
 Physical maintenance and care of group members
 Addition of new members through procreation or adoption
 Socialization of children
 Social control of members
 Production, consumption, distribution of goods and services, and
 Affective nurturance — love
(Vanier Institute, 2012)
16
“Family Portrait” (Statistics Canada 2006)
8,896,840 families up 6.3% from 2001
• 6,105,910 married up 3.5% from 2001
• 1,376,865 common-law up 18.9% from 2001
• 1,414,060 lone-parent families up 7.8% from 2001
17
Families in Canada (Statistics Canada 2006)
Family Type 2001 2006
Married 70.5% 68.6%
Common-law 13.8% 15.5%
Lone-parent 15.7% 15.9%
Same-sex couples
(includes married
couples)
n.d. 0.6%
18
What are the implications from the
research? (Statistics Canada, 2006)
• 2006 was the first time unmarried (51.5%) outnumbered
married people
• 20 years ago only 38.6% were unmarried
19
What are the implications from the
research? (Statistics Canada, 2006)
2001-2006 11.8% increase in one-person households
2001-2006 11.2% increase in couples without children
aged 24 and under
2001-2006 0.4% increase in couples and children aged
24 years and under
20
What are the implications from the
research? (Statistics Canada, 2006)
• 2006, 43.5% of the 4 million young adults aged 20-29 lived in
the parental home – 20 years ago the figure was 32.1%
• Ontario is 51.5% (next only to N-L at 52.2%)
21
Common Family Stages (HealthLinkBC, 2012)
Independence
Coupling
Parenting
Launching adult children
Retirement
22
Vanier institute Fact Sheet Fathers in
Canada (June 2012)
Total Number of Father in Canada 8.1 million
Lone Parent Fathers 338,000
Stay at Home Dads (2 parent families) 54,000
Stay at home parents who were fathers 1984 & 2008 3% & 10%
Average time spent daily caring for children 3.1h
Average daily time spent performing paid work 6h
Proportion who claim to be more involved with their children than
their father was
75%
23
Vanier Institute Fact Sheet Mothers in
Canada (May 2012)
Total number of mothers in Canada 9.2 million
The number of mothers with children under the age of 18 living with
them
3.9million
Employment rate for mothers with school aged children 1976 and 2009 39% - 73%
The amount of time spent daily by mother in unpaid work 4.6h
The amount of time spent daily by women caring for children 0 - 4 6.6h
The median net worth of lone parent families headed by a female – the
lowest of any family type (2009)
$17,000
The extent to which, on average, women without children out earn
women with children – this gap increases with the number of children
12%
24
Independence Stage (HealthLinkBC, 2012)
• Emotional, physical, social, & financial independence
• Intimacy - ability to develop & maintain close relationships
25
Coupling Stage (HealthLinkBC, 2012)
Developing a new family together
Adjustments to relationships with friends & family
Committed to making it work
Needs of another to consider
26
Parenting (HealthLinkBC, 2012)
Ability to communicate well, maintain your
relationships, and solve problems are tested
Provide a safe, loving, and organized
environment
Divorce, & extramarital affairs
27
“Empty Nest” (HealthLinkBC, 2012)
Children leave home - "empty nest”
Developing adult relationships with your children
Spouses may no longer feel compatible
Health and energy levels decline
Caring for aging parents
28
Retirement (HealthLinkBC, 2012)
New family members – grandchildren
Children marry or divorce
Caring for elderly parents
Physical & mental abilities may decline
Financial or social status decline
Death of family members
29
References
HealthLinkBC. (2012). Family life cycle. Retrieved August 24, 2012 from
http://www.healthlinkbc.ca/kb/content/special/ty6171.html
Hick, S. (2010). Social work in Canada: An introduction. Toronto, ON.,
Canada: Thompson Educational Publishing.
Jaco. M. (2002). Individual treatment. In F. Turner (Ed.), Social work
practice: a Canadian perspective (pp. 255- 269). Toronto : Prentice Hall.
Ridgely, E. (2002). Family treatment. In F. Turner (Ed.), Social work
practice: a Canadian perspective (pp. 270- 281). Toronto : Prentice Hall.
Statistics Canada. (2006). 2006 Census: Families, marital status, households
and dwelling characteristics. Retrieved August 23, 2012.
http://www.statcan.gc.ca/daily-quotidien/070912/dq070912a-eng.htm
The Vanier Institute of the Family. ( 2012). Definition of the family.
Retrieved July 4, 2012 from h
ttp://www.vanierinstitute.ca/definition_of_family
30

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Week 2 a text

  • 4. Types of Service Users Voluntary clients People who have chosen to seek help from a social service worker Involuntary clients Those who are legally obligated to accept services (Hick, 2010, p. 83) 4
  • 5. Social Service Work with Individuals “People may be embedded in a web of connections with others and with the institutions of society, but every life is experienced uniquely, and its quality is determined solely by the person living it (Jaco, 2002. p. 255)”. 5
  • 6. Terminology “Casework with individuals refers to a method of social work intervention in which the worker intentionally creates a helping relationship with a client that enables dialogue, interaction, and influence to occur, with the purpose of effecting positive changes in client thought feeling or action, or in the social environment he or she inhabits (Jaco, 2002, p. 257)”. 6
  • 7. Clinical Social Work “a newer term for this same activity [casework], but one that includes clearly linking clients to resources, coordinating services, and advocacy (Swenson, 1995 as referenced in Jaco, 2002, p.257)”. 7
  • 8. Direct Practice Similar to above but “helping interventions at the micro-level provided to individuals, couples, families, in contrast to indirect or macro level practice which takes place at the community or policy change (Jaco, 2002, p.257) 8
  • 9. Therapy “work in which social and psychological means are used to enable individuals (single or in family or formed groups) to cope with environmental, interpersonal and/or intrapsychic dilemmas – and the interactions among these- that are causing personal distress (Woods & Hollis, 1990 as quoted in Jaco, 2002, p. 257) 9
  • 10. Shared Elements (Jaco, 2002, p. 257) Concern for internal and external life of the client Concern for the manner in which these interact Goal to strengthen the client to cope with pressures and demands from within and without Purpose of achieving a sound level of functioning 10
  • 11. Goals Improved: • Self-esteem • Social functioning • Problem solving • Analysis 11
  • 12. Theory “[A] theory is an attempt to explain. It is, in short, a framework for understanding. It is a set of ideas linked together to help make us make sense of particular issue or set of issues (Thompson, 2000, p.22).” 12
  • 13. Critical Self-Reflection (Hick, 2010, p. 97) Critical self reflection – “knowledge about ones self (Mullaly, 2002, as quoted in Hick, 2010, p.97)” It is important for SSW to “understand how their own identities, beliefs, and their professional and personal lives are shaped by forces in society such as the media, parental influence, educational institutions and social structures (Hick, 2010, p. 97)? 13
  • 15. Family • Types of families - traditional, blended, single parent, same sex, other…. • Family issues – divorce, separation, domestic violence, child welfare, adoption 15
  • 16. Definition of Family The Vanier Institute of the Family defines “family” as: Any combination of two or more persons who are bound together over time by ties of mutual consent, birth and/or adoption or placement and who, together, assume responsibilities for variant combinations of some of the following:  Physical maintenance and care of group members  Addition of new members through procreation or adoption  Socialization of children  Social control of members  Production, consumption, distribution of goods and services, and  Affective nurturance — love (Vanier Institute, 2012) 16
  • 17. “Family Portrait” (Statistics Canada 2006) 8,896,840 families up 6.3% from 2001 • 6,105,910 married up 3.5% from 2001 • 1,376,865 common-law up 18.9% from 2001 • 1,414,060 lone-parent families up 7.8% from 2001 17
  • 18. Families in Canada (Statistics Canada 2006) Family Type 2001 2006 Married 70.5% 68.6% Common-law 13.8% 15.5% Lone-parent 15.7% 15.9% Same-sex couples (includes married couples) n.d. 0.6% 18
  • 19. What are the implications from the research? (Statistics Canada, 2006) • 2006 was the first time unmarried (51.5%) outnumbered married people • 20 years ago only 38.6% were unmarried 19
  • 20. What are the implications from the research? (Statistics Canada, 2006) 2001-2006 11.8% increase in one-person households 2001-2006 11.2% increase in couples without children aged 24 and under 2001-2006 0.4% increase in couples and children aged 24 years and under 20
  • 21. What are the implications from the research? (Statistics Canada, 2006) • 2006, 43.5% of the 4 million young adults aged 20-29 lived in the parental home – 20 years ago the figure was 32.1% • Ontario is 51.5% (next only to N-L at 52.2%) 21
  • 22. Common Family Stages (HealthLinkBC, 2012) Independence Coupling Parenting Launching adult children Retirement 22
  • 23. Vanier institute Fact Sheet Fathers in Canada (June 2012) Total Number of Father in Canada 8.1 million Lone Parent Fathers 338,000 Stay at Home Dads (2 parent families) 54,000 Stay at home parents who were fathers 1984 & 2008 3% & 10% Average time spent daily caring for children 3.1h Average daily time spent performing paid work 6h Proportion who claim to be more involved with their children than their father was 75% 23
  • 24. Vanier Institute Fact Sheet Mothers in Canada (May 2012) Total number of mothers in Canada 9.2 million The number of mothers with children under the age of 18 living with them 3.9million Employment rate for mothers with school aged children 1976 and 2009 39% - 73% The amount of time spent daily by mother in unpaid work 4.6h The amount of time spent daily by women caring for children 0 - 4 6.6h The median net worth of lone parent families headed by a female – the lowest of any family type (2009) $17,000 The extent to which, on average, women without children out earn women with children – this gap increases with the number of children 12% 24
  • 25. Independence Stage (HealthLinkBC, 2012) • Emotional, physical, social, & financial independence • Intimacy - ability to develop & maintain close relationships 25
  • 26. Coupling Stage (HealthLinkBC, 2012) Developing a new family together Adjustments to relationships with friends & family Committed to making it work Needs of another to consider 26
  • 27. Parenting (HealthLinkBC, 2012) Ability to communicate well, maintain your relationships, and solve problems are tested Provide a safe, loving, and organized environment Divorce, & extramarital affairs 27
  • 28. “Empty Nest” (HealthLinkBC, 2012) Children leave home - "empty nest” Developing adult relationships with your children Spouses may no longer feel compatible Health and energy levels decline Caring for aging parents 28
  • 29. Retirement (HealthLinkBC, 2012) New family members – grandchildren Children marry or divorce Caring for elderly parents Physical & mental abilities may decline Financial or social status decline Death of family members 29
  • 30. References HealthLinkBC. (2012). Family life cycle. Retrieved August 24, 2012 from http://www.healthlinkbc.ca/kb/content/special/ty6171.html Hick, S. (2010). Social work in Canada: An introduction. Toronto, ON., Canada: Thompson Educational Publishing. Jaco. M. (2002). Individual treatment. In F. Turner (Ed.), Social work practice: a Canadian perspective (pp. 255- 269). Toronto : Prentice Hall. Ridgely, E. (2002). Family treatment. In F. Turner (Ed.), Social work practice: a Canadian perspective (pp. 270- 281). Toronto : Prentice Hall. Statistics Canada. (2006). 2006 Census: Families, marital status, households and dwelling characteristics. Retrieved August 23, 2012. http://www.statcan.gc.ca/daily-quotidien/070912/dq070912a-eng.htm The Vanier Institute of the Family. ( 2012). Definition of the family. Retrieved July 4, 2012 from h ttp://www.vanierinstitute.ca/definition_of_family 30

Editor's Notes

  • #15: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vhk05b9cA9o