Field instruction in social work education: the Indian experience

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Kanagaraj S
1999 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 85-94
Author(s):  
Alonzo Cavazos ◽  
Dolores Guerrero

This study examines the effect of field instruction on assertiveness and tests the effectiveness of an assertiveness training program that was delivered concurrently with field education. Undergraduate field interns (N=27) were pre-post tested with the Assertiveness Self-Report Inventory during the first and last weeks of field education. Approximately half of the interns (n=13) received assertiveness training during the university-based field instruction seminar. Surprisingly, assertiveness scores did not change statistically from pretest to posttest, and the assertiveness training program failed to raise assertiveness. These counterintuitive findings are explored, and implications for social work education and practice are discussed. Social workers are expected to advocate for their clients, particularly in situations where people are discriminated against and oppressed because of ethnicity, gender, religion, age, socio-economical status, sexual orientation, or physical disability (Council on Social Work Education, 1994). Social workers, “... must exercise [themselves] assertively in order to fulfill nearly all social work roles and functions” (Cournoyer, 1998, p. 11). Pardeck, et al. (1991), posit that social work education should increase a students assertiveness because increased assertiveness is critical to effective social work practice. Without an adequate repertoire of assertive skills, social workers will be prevented from affecting change and demonstrating the value of the social work profession (Eldridge, 1983). Although these are deeply held beliefs, the relationships between field education, assertiveness and advocacy have not been studied. This study explores two research questions: 1) does assertiveness increase as a result of field education; and 2) whether an assertiveness training program, which is delivered concurrently with field education, can increase assertiveness.


Somatechnics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-94
Author(s):  
Kristin Smith ◽  
Donna Jeffery ◽  
Kim Collins

Neoliberal universities embrace the logic of acceleration where the quickening of daily life for both educators and students is driven by desires for efficient forms of productivity and measurable outcomes of work. From this perspective, time is governed by expanding capacities of the digital world that speed up the pace of work while blurring the boundaries between workplace, home, and leisure. In this article, we draw from findings from qualitative interviews conducted with Canadian social work educators who teach using online-based critical pedagogy as well as recent graduates who completed their social work education in online learning programs to explore the effects of acceleration within these digitalised spaces of higher education. We view these findings alongside French philosopher Henri Bergson's concepts of duration and intuition, forms of temporality that manage to resist fixed, mechanised standards of time. We argue that the digitalisation of time produced through online education technologies can be seen as a thinning of possibilities for deeper and more critically self-reflexive knowledge production and a reduction in opportunities to build on social justice-based practices.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document