This book aims to bring order to the diversity of methods which is so typical of social work. The tools described can be directly put into practice and adapted to the social worker¿s personalised approach with their clients. Useful for both the inexperienced and the more practiced social worker, the book provides a solid basis through the use of numerous practical examples and offers the more experienced social worker a substantial resource and the means to legitimise a chosen course of action and social work intervention. Schools of social work will be able to use the book as an easily…mehr
This book aims to bring order to the diversity of methods which is so typical of social work. The tools described can be directly put into practice and adapted to the social worker¿s personalised approach with their clients. Useful for both the inexperienced and the more practiced social worker, the book provides a solid basis through the use of numerous practical examples and offers the more experienced social worker a substantial resource and the means to legitimise a chosen course of action and social work intervention. Schools of social work will be able to use the book as an easily accessible resource for social work assessments, interventions and quality social work management.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
From 1978, Herman J. de Mönnink has held a position as Senior Lecturer at the School of Social Work, Hanze University of Applied Sciences, Groningen, the Netherlands; he is in private practice as a trainer in multimethod social work (MMSW) and a trauma psychologist/grief therapist. He believes that the strength of MMSW is that it effectively meets human needs and human rights of socially, economically and politically vulnerable people. Herman graduated from the University of Groningen (1976) in Social Clinical Psychology (MSc), where he managed the practice research project `Psychotherapy for the Poor¿. He published several articles about evidence-based social work methods, grief support and burnout-prevention. In 1996, his first book was published, titled Grief Support, including Unfinished Business Syndrome (UBS) and Therapeutic Photo Confrontation (TPC). For Victim Support Netherlands he trained social workers using TPC for victims of sudden death (by accidents, homicide, suicide, natural disasters, terrorism and aircraft disaster). In 2004, Herman published the Dutch version of this book titled The Social Workers¿ Toolbox: Multimethod Social Work. In this bestselling book he proposed a paradigm shift, working not from a one-method-fits-for-all-perspective but from a multimethod perspective. Herman trained social workers around the world about a flexible combination of 20 well-written social work methods.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword (Neil Thompson) Preface Introduction Overview of the book Part I The Social Work Approach 1 The three steps Social Work Approach 2 PIE-Empowerment Social Work Theory 3 Social Workers Toolbox: overview Part II Social Work Core Method 4 Non-directive core method Part III Three survival-focused methods 5 Body work method 6 Practical-material method 7 Trauma work method Part IV Three affection-focused methods 8 Cathartic method 9 Expression method 10 Ritual method Part V Three self-determination methods 11 Cognitive method 12 Narrative method 13 Behavioural method PART VI Six systemic methods enhancing supportive networks 14 Social network method 15 Relationship based method 16 Family work method 17 Groupwork method 18 Case management method 19 Mediation method PART VI Four macro-methods enhancing community resources 20 Monitoring 21 Prevention 22 Collective advocacy 23 Social work research PART VII Capita Selecta 24 Human Needs & Human Rights as an Ethical Guide in Social Work 25 Social Work and Grief Support 26 Social Work and Unfinished Business Syndrome (UBS) 27 Job stress among social workers: the stress matrix Appendices: Overview Appendix 1 Social case work-report Appendix 2 Self-test traumatic stress (STS) Appendix 3 Trauma-reaction checklist (TCL) Appendix 4 Quick scan Unfinished Business Syndrome (UBS) Appendix 5 Territorial inventory checklist (TICL) Appendix 6 Facing sudden death by Judy Tatelbaum, MSW References Index
Foreword (Neil Thompson) Preface Introduction Overview of the book Part I The Social Work Approach 1 The three steps Social Work Approach 2 PIE-Empowerment Social Work Theory 3 Social Workers Toolbox: overview Part II Social Work Core Method 4 Non-directive core method Part III Three survival-focused methods 5 Body work method 6 Practical-material method 7 Trauma work method Part IV Three affection-focused methods 8 Cathartic method 9 Expression method 10 Ritual method Part V Three self-determination methods 11 Cognitive method 12 Narrative method 13 Behavioural method PART VI Six systemic methods enhancing supportive networks 14 Social network method 15 Relationship based method 16 Family work method 17 Groupwork method 18 Case management method 19 Mediation method PART VI Four macro-methods enhancing community resources 20 Monitoring 21 Prevention 22 Collective advocacy 23 Social work research PART VII Capita Selecta 24 Human Needs & Human Rights as an Ethical Guide in Social Work 25 Social Work and Grief Support 26 Social Work and Unfinished Business Syndrome (UBS) 27 Job stress among social workers: the stress matrix Appendices: Overview Appendix 1 Social case work-report Appendix 2 Self-test traumatic stress (STS) Appendix 3 Trauma-reaction checklist (TCL) Appendix 4 Quick scan Unfinished Business Syndrome (UBS) Appendix 5 Territorial inventory checklist (TICL) Appendix 6 Facing sudden death by Judy Tatelbaum, MSW References Index
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497
USt-IdNr: DE450055826