Title: Social Work: Finding A Personal Balance
1Social Work Finding A Personal Balance
- Catherine F. Schryer, PHD
- SSHRC grant 34199
2Methods
- Review of professional literature
- Observations 13 supervision sessions
- in 6 hospital and agency settings
- --7 transcribed
- Semi Structured interviews with 16 participants
(8 interns and 8 supervisors) - -- 5 transcribed
- Preliminary data analysis
3Supervision
- A dyadic encounter between supervisor and
supervisee wherein supervisee provides accounts
of practice - Purposes Administrative, educational,
supportive - Can occur throughout a social workers career
4Supervision Rationale Kadushin,1992
- Supervision necessary because work is
- Unpredictable
- Non-routine
- Non-standard
- Highly individualized
- Unobservable
- SW requires ongoing individualized monitoring
5Case Presentations
- Occur within context of supervision sessions
- Consist of
- Identification of patient/client problems
- Assessment/diagnosis of problems
- Intervention/ Treatment strategies
- Follow up
6Field History
- Biopsychosocial (Nason, 1990, p. 13) origins
rather than bio medical - Supervision practices parallel field history of
social work
7Stage 1Early History
- 1880s to 1910
- Origins in Charitable Organizations
- Friendly Visitors supervised by staff
- Main emphasis of supervision accountability
- Secondary emphasis--training
8Stage 2Growing Professionalism
- 1910-1920s
- Training programs develop first in agencies then
in universities - Professional organizations emerge in US and
Canada by middle of 1920s - Main emphasis of supervision -- education
9Stage 3Growing Medicalization
- 1920s-1940s
- Many associated with hospitals and mental health
clinics - Adopt medical models of case presentations
- Insight theories psychoanalysisbasis of
diagnosis - Supervision--therapeutic--supportive
10Stage 4Growing Challenges
- 1950s-1970s
- Disillusionment with psychoanalytic approach
- Development of many other theoretical
perspectivesempowerment, environmental (person
in situation) - Growing divisions between individual, group and
community approaches - Supervision training and support
11Stage 5Administrative Accountability
- 1980s present
- Cut backs in all areas
- Competition between helping organizations
- Government demands for accountability
- Supervision administration, teaching and support
12Areas of Tension
- Knowledge basis
- Process seems stable
- Theory basis unstable and competing a
developing profession - Relationships
- Long term investment versus short term reality
- Professional Identity
13Knowledge Basis Social Work Process
- History/Discussion
- Assessment
- Intervention repertoire
- Key termsprocess, relationship, person in his or
her environment
14Knowledge/Theory Basis Unstable
- History of adopting various theoretical
frameworks (similar to education, composition and
rhetoric) - Debate re value of theory
- Eclectic mixchoice according to agency or client
circumstances - Consequence difficult to navigate for newcomers
15Examples Medical
- Intern 1 Shes functioning, shes able to do
things, her energy level is low, and the desires
are not there, but I think in terms of my
assessment I think its reactive depression that
she cant be a mom - SW 1 So you think, shes more reactive
depression than a major depression.
16Example Psychoanalytic
- Intern 2 Its a self-object function. This is
just a word that Dr. H. taught us, but it does
something for him to kind of like what you were
saying - SW Is it a tease?...But you cant ask that
directly, but you can help him come to (an
understanding), but that takes longer, more
psychodynamic takes longer..
17Example Social Work
- sw 4 Okay, so this is the clinical case that
were going to do the ten consonants with. - translate, negotiate
- Content
- Solve versus manage problems
- Personal versus political
- Visitor, customer, complainant
18Area of Tension Relationships
- Value of long term relationships. Reality of
short term interventions. - For student/interns necessity and tension of
termination - Personal Boundaries
19Example Terminations
- SW 1 I sense a lack of confidence
- Intern 1. ..Just in my whole placement here, I
think Ive learned that with people that I think
I do well with tend to come backif I hit right
on the nail, I scare them off. - Intern 2 I dont want to transfer my people to
other students
20Personal Boundaries With Clients
- Intern 1 So I kind of saw a little reflection of
myself - SW 1 Counter-transference. Its good you have
the insight to see you know..
21Personal Boundaries Supervision
- SW 6 Well I think its really good that youve
identified some of those things, and we can talk
more abouthow youre doing and how youre
feelingObviously, my role is not to be your
counselor - Intern 6 No, I know
- SW 6 But to be open to the issues that youre
dealing withfor the development of self, and
self-reflection, that is part of a placement.
22 Professional Identity
- Negotiating Professional Boundaries
- Standing ones personal ground
- Establishing professional ethos or credibility
23Example Professional Boundaries
- Intern 4 Just an aside, I saw (x) this morning.
He insulted me to my face.. - SW 4 So what did he say?
- Intern He said whats the matter with you that
you dont have enough influence and competency to
have influence over your co-workers?... - SW 4 I would let him know that you cant be held
accountable for something that someone else is
doing. All you can do is give them the
information and they make their own choices and
then I would deal with him in terms of how he
feels about it.
24Implications
- Professional identity is a shifting ground.
- Supervision/case presentations reflect history
and status of profession. - Tensions of field present in supervision and case
presentations - Social work practice varies according to setting
- Interns must design a personal balance to suit
each context