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Showing 1 to 15 of 73 results Save | Export
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Wolk, James L.; And Others – Social Work, 1994
Contends that case managers engage in the practice of management. Employs Mintzberg's seminal research on chief executive behavior to argue that case managers' work is similarly characterized by brevity, variety, and fragmentation. Notes that case managers perform the 10 roles developed by Mintzberg. Describes roles and presents case managers'…
Descriptors: Administration, Caseworker Approach, Organization, Social Workers
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Barth, Richard P.; Sullivan, Richard – Social Work, 1985
Considers principles for collecting competent evidence and provides case studies of a child and an adolescent to demonstrate evidence collection methods in social work practice. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Caseworker Approach, Child Advocacy, Child Welfare, Court Litigation
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Gill, Margaret M.; Amadio, Carol M. – Child Welfare, 1983
Discusses foster care with potential for adoption, describes eight legal categories identified as appropriate for foster care/adoption planning, and indicates aspects of cooperation between social work and legal personnel. Rights of biological parents, the importance of trust among parties concerned, and misuses and pitfalls of the foster…
Descriptors: Adoption, Caseworker Approach, Cooperation, Foster Care
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Altshuler, Sandra J. – Child Welfare, 1999
Highlights use by caseworkers of genogram construction with children in care. Notes that genogram construction can be an initial engagement tool and a way to gather information about children's view of care and their family. Suggests that genograms can enhance rapport between caseworkers and children of different ethnicities, support permanency…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Caseworker Approach, Caseworkers, Child Welfare
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Staudt, Marlys – Social Work, 1985
Reframes the traditional definitions of and approaches to adult protective services in light of the increase in mechanisms for involuntary interventions. Suggests that the role of the social worker in contemporary adult protection is that of researcher and advocate for changes in already established forms of involuntary intervention. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Caseworker Approach, Intervention, Social Workers
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Murdach, Allison D. – Social Work, 1983
Presents a perspective to help social workers develop the organizational skills needed to practice effectively in hospitals. Examines the nature of hospitals and the hospital worker's practice-building and practice-implementing skills. Examples illustrate task management, creating power, and developing the work role. (JAC)
Descriptors: Caseworker Approach, Counselor Role, Hospitals, Power Structure
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Backhaus, Kristina A. – Social Work, 1984
Interviewed 15 social workers to examine the use of Life Books for children in substitute family care. Results indicated the project was valuable in helping children integrate past and present experiences and develop a sense of identity. (JAC)
Descriptors: Adoption, Caseworker Approach, Elementary Secondary Education, Foster Care
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Kagle, Jill Doner – Social Work, 1984
Contends that recording has become an administrative rather than a clinical activity, retroactive rather than proactive, bringing its usefulness to clinical practice in question. Presents suggestions for improving the clinical record and for returning it to its proper place as a vital component of clinical practice. (LLL)
Descriptors: Case Records, Caseworker Approach, Counselor Role, Counselor Training
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Rycraft, Joan R. – Social Work, 1994
Conducted exploratory study to identify factors that may influence some caseworkers to continue employment in public child welfare when so many others are leaving. From comprehensive focused interviews with 23 caseworkers, 4 factors of retention emerged: mission, goodness of fit, supervision, and investment. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Caseworker Approach, Child Welfare, Employee Attitudes, Labor Turnover
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Cingolani, Judith – Social Work, 1984
Discusses the particular problems social workers face when working with involuntary clients. Suggests that social conflict perspective, which assumes a conflict of interest between clients and their social environment, is more congruent with clients' perceptions of reality. (JAC)
Descriptors: Caseworker Approach, Client Characteristics (Human Services), Counselor Client Relationship, Social Environment
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Hall, Julian C. – Social Work, 1980
Encounters, defined as contacts between a social worker and client that have not been regularly scheduled, represent an alternative to the classic casework method. Presents a consumer-oriented strategy based on clinical experience in a public community mental health center in a large urban area. (Author)
Descriptors: Caseworker Approach, Counselor Role, Helping Relationship, Individual Counseling
Boserup, Daniel G. – 1978
The lack of a firmly established pattern for managing cases in social services seems to be widespread. This creates a need for a unified and standardized procedure at the individual case level of service delivery. This manual represents a basic variation of the general case management model. It is meant to be used as a rationale and motivation for…
Descriptors: Caseworker Approach, Child Abuse, Children, Curriculum Design
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Barber, James; And Others – Community Development Journal, 1987
The authors outline a community organization course that develops a casework approach to social change. The course features a community organizing project. (CH)
Descriptors: Caseworker Approach, Community Coordination, Foreign Countries, Models
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Noble, Dorinda N.; Hamilton, Adrianne K. – Social Work, 1983
Discusses the importance of accurate assessment of the patient's motivations for noncompliance and of wise planning of management to meet these needs. These are essential social work tasks that will enhance patient compliance. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Caseworker Approach, Coping, Medical Services, Motivation
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Bertsche, Anne Vandeberg; Horejsi, Charles R. – Social Work, 1980
Case coordination is an important social work activity with roots in the earliest objectives and functions of the profession. This article outlines the theoretical framework of case coordination and describes the tasks, skills, and knowledge essential to it. (Author)
Descriptors: Case Records, Caseworker Approach, Coordination, Counseling Theories
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