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Emslie, Michael – Child & Youth Services, 2013
There is growing interest in the professionalization of the youth work field in Australia and the United States. In this article I draw on relevant literature from the sociology of professions to explore the appeal of professionalization for youth work. The interest in professionalism is examined along with the strategies youth work practitioners…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Youth Programs, Professional Education, Professional Identity
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Baizerman, Michael – Child & Youth Services, 2013
The sociopolitical movement to enhance youth workers' occupational status and related emoluments strategically links this goal to competency-based assessment. While the goals of improved conditions, remuneration, and career opportunities for workers is supported, the joining of those goals to both professionalization and in turn competency-based…
Descriptors: Social Agencies, Professional Recognition, Professional Education, Professional Identity
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Cooper, Trudi – Child & Youth Services, 2013
This article contends that opposition to professionalization has been led by writers from the United Kingdom and Europe who tacitly assume the (continued) presence of institutions that were a feature of the British context in the 1970s and early 1980s, and that still exist in modified form today. Most of these institutions are absent in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Professional Development, Professional Identity, Institutional Characteristics
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Johnston-Goodstar, Katie; Velure Roholt, Ross – Child & Youth Services, 2013
In this article, the authors use a comparative historical approach to examine the consequences of professionalization within teaching and social work and to answer the following questions: What are the unintended consequences of professionalization? Has professionalization in these fields supported higher quality practice, increased working…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Change, Social Work, Professional Education
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VeLure Roholt, Ross; Rana, Sheetal – Child & Youth Services, 2011
Few formal post-secondary educational programs in the United States focus on youth work, thus youth workers often enter the field with diverse backgrounds and varying levels of experience working with youth. Drawing on mounting evidence that quality youth service requires skilled staff, professional-development opportunities have received…
Descriptors: Youth Programs, Program Evaluation, Action Research, Professional Development
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Anderson-Nathe, Ben – Child & Youth Services, 2008
Phenomenological research investigates the meaning of lived experiences for participants, as well as the implications of those experiences. This chapter presents brief biographical sketches of 12 youth workers who participated in a phenomenological investigation of the experience of self in moments of not-knowing what to do. Each participant's…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Youth Programs, Adults, Caseworker Approach
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Jenkinson, Hilary – Child & Youth Services, 2009
This article explores the concept of supervision and its implementation within a youth work context. The article describes and explores a process of staff development facilitated by the author which involved providing supervision training to a group of youth work practitioners at Cork YMCA in Ireland and continuing to meet them on a monthly basis…
Descriptors: Supervision, Foreign Countries, Youth Programs, Mentors
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Anderson-Nathe, Ben – Child & Youth Services, 2008
This chapter provides a context for the concept of not-knowing, including a discussion of how the concept was framed. The experience of not-knowing in professional youth work is framed in relationship to other concepts explored by the social work and therapeutic literature (including vicarious trauma, helplessness, secondary trauma, and burnout),…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Youth Programs, Adults, Caseworker Approach
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Anderson-Nathe, Ben – Child & Youth Services, 2008
One of the few truly reassuring features of not-knowing among youth workers is the realization that not-knowing cannot last forever. Eventually, some feature of the situation shifts, and youth workers move back into the capacity for action. This chapter describes the last of five themes associated with youth workers' experiences of not knowing…
Descriptors: Youth Programs, Adults, Caseworker Approach, Social Work
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Anderson-Nathe, Ben – Child & Youth Services, 2008
Phenomenology offers a unique and useful approach to understanding how people experience events or phenomena. The method is particularly instructive in exploring how youth workers experience and make sense of moments of not-knowing in the context of their professional relationships with young people. This chapter provides an introduction to…
Descriptors: Youth Programs, Adults, Caseworker Approach, Social Work
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Gharabaghi, Kiaras – Child & Youth Services, 2008
The implications of the practitioner's personal values are explored in relation to the professional issues of child and youth care practice. Values are inevitably a component of decision-making and therefore are integrally connected to ethics in the field. The prevalence of subjectivity over objectivity is emphasized in relation to in-the-moment…
Descriptors: Values, Ethics, Youth Programs, Caseworker Approach
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Anderson-Nathe, Ben – Child & Youth Services, 2008
When describing how they experience moments of not-knowing, youth workers often talk about a sense of paralysis, as though their uncertainty becomes physically constraining. This chapter describes the first of five themes associated with youth workers' experiences of not knowing what to do: the paralysis of stuckness. In addition to describing and…
Descriptors: Youth Programs, Adults, Caseworker Approach, Social Work
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Anderson-Nathe, Ben – Child & Youth Services, 2008
Youth workers operate within a professional climate in which competence is perceived to be linked to a worker's ability to respond quickly and effectively to whatever situations clients may present. Many youth workers perceive their own inability to respond in moments of stuckness as indicative of their own failing and lack of professional skill.…
Descriptors: Youth Programs, Adults, Caseworker Approach, Social Work
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Anderson-Nathe, Ben – Child & Youth Services, 2008
Among youth workers who experience moments of not-knowing what to do, many often describe their thoughts and reactions to the phenomenon in vocational and existential terms. They ask what right they have to work in the helping professions if they find themselves simply unable to be helpful. In many cases, the vocational crises following…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Hermeneutics, Youth Programs, Caseworker Approach
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Krueger, Mark – Child & Youth Services, 2004
Recently the author has been experimenting with juxtaposing events from his life before and after his years as a youthworker with his experience as a youthworker in fictitious narratives that ring true with his experiences. The author's goal is to explore how these experiences are intertwined. A few members of their research group have also been…
Descriptors: Caseworker Approach, Caseworkers, Phenomenology, Personal Narratives
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