Title: IASCE 3rd Annual Conference 2003
1IASCE 3rd Annual Conference 2003
- Males in Social Care An Endangered Species? (I
Know the Price of Nail Polish) - Dr Niall McElwee,
- President,
- IASCE
2Presentation Based On
- (1) CYC-Net Paper 2001 (McElwee, 2001)
- (2) RMA funded regional study (McElwee, Jackson,
McKenna-McElwee, 2001) - (3) Dept of Education and Science national funded
study (McElwee, McKenna-McElwee, Jackson,
Cameron, - in Press) - (4) Workshop to University of Victoria, BC,
Canada August 2003.
3What is Social Care?
- Social Care is the professional provision of
care, protection, support, welfare and advocacy
for vulnerable or dependent clients, individually
or in groups. This is achieved through the
planning and evaluation of individualised and
group programmes of care, which are based on
needs, identified in consultation with the client
and delivered through day-to-day shared life
experiences. All interventions are based on
established best practice and in-depth knowledge
of life-span development (Joint Committee, 2003
3).
4How Many Social Care Workers?
- 3,000 staff encompassed by our terms of
reference of whom 55 were considered to be
professionally qualified and 45 who were not
professionally qualified (Joint Committee,
2003).
5The Work is Complex!
- The role of the Social Care Practitioner is
becoming increasingly complex with an emerging
body of literature referring to the process of
reflection as being central to constructivist
learning (Graham and Megarry, 2002).
6Relationships are the Key
- Relationships are the essence of child and youth
care practice, for it is within the context of
meaningful relationships that young people may
frame their experiences. In the context of a
genuinely caring and mutual relationship, they
might find new ways of (re)structuring their
experience of the world and the encounters they
have had and may have (McElwee, 2003)MEN!!!
7The Joint Committees Aspirations
-
- 1. Completion of an Individual Training
Audit (ITA) - 2. Development of Individual Training
Programme (ITP) - 3. Delivery of Individualised Training
Programme
8An Overall Principle
- If we are to attract more men in to the field, we
have to find a way to describe and advertise the
experience of men in the field in a manner which
is attractive to men. We need to be talking
about what it means to be male in this field, and
we need to be able to explain, in our
advertisements, why we need men in the field. We
need to create the conditions in our college
programmes which will support men in being
different.
9The Literature from the USA
- In child and youth care, as in other professions,
in other words, men are more likely to stay and
work hard when they feel a sense of ownership in
their organizations and are adequately rewarded
with pay, work incentives, and encouragement
(Krueger, 2003, in press).
10The Emerging Literature
- It is a well established fact that there is an
absence of males across the helping and caring
professions in Ireland (see Wells, Ryan, McElwee,
Boyce and Forkan, 2000 McElwee 2001 McElwee,
Jackson ltcKenna-McElwee, 2001 McElwee,
McKenna-McElwee Cameron, 2003).
11Our Newest Partners
- Institute of Technology Blanchardstown
- 3 males out of 55 school leaver students
- 10 males out of 28 mature students
12Our Newest Partners
- Limerick Institute of Technology
- 3 males out of 35 students
13My Philosophical Position
- Studies focusing on the experience of
marginalized groups with regard to services usage
and delivery suggest that both male and female
caregivers are essential to ensure appropriate
care.
14Asking Complex Questions
- We need to ask ourselves a fundamental question
and that is, why are males not considering social
care as a viable professional career option? This
is crucially important given the constant
discussions amongst students, practitioners and
academics at all levels in this country around
the emerging professionalisation of social care.
15A Male Practitioner Perspective
- Part of our job a large part was to keep the
place under control - to maintain order and
discipline. There were two staff on for every
shift, one male and one female. The males role
as protector/enforcer was clear (Garfat, 2003,
in press).
16A Male Practitioner Perspective
- There was, I was to discover, a place for that
other side of being male, the side that is
sometimes described as sensitive, or feminine, as
if somehow the characteristics associated with
being this way were somehow the domain of women.
But for many years, in many programs, this was
the only accepted way to be a male in a program
for adolescents, and for many years it was the
role I accepted (Garfat, 2003, in press).
17What do the Service Users Say?
- A point that is consistently raised by youth is
that of adult caregivers and the role models they
provide. In short, there were too few positive
males in their lives providing consistency and
mutuality for them.
18Visiting Agencies (1992-2003)
- In our visitations to social care centres over
the years, both McElwee and McKenna-McElwee have
noted that a high proportion of young males in
care report as experiencing adult males only as
authority figures and ones usually perceived as
hassling them.
19Our Pilot Study (Athlone IT, 2001)
- The sample of students involved in this research
is predominantly female i.e. 95.9 with males
comprising a very small 4.1. This confirms what
has been felt by many of us working in social
care (McElwee, Jackson, McKenna-McElwee, 2001)
20Males Missing in All Years
- A predominance of females across all years of
study of Social Care in the Athlone Institute of
Technology. Some 93 of the first year sample
were female compared to 98 of the second year
sample and the entire Diploma year sample. In
the fourth year Degree sample 96 of respondents
were female (McElwee, Jackson, McKenna-McEwee,
2001).
21Stereotyping
- Reverse stereotyping was a norm as 67 of the
female students felt social care was feminine
in orientation. 13.2 of the female students
articulated that males were not able for social
care practice which, again, is worrying. In
fact, 37.5 of the male students reported they
(now) felt the same (McElwee, Jackson,
McKenna-McElwee, 2001).
22Why be Concerned?
- The low numbers of males has serious implications
for (a) future recruitment into the child care
services in this country and (b) in terms of the
absence of appropriately qualified males as
front-line practitioners with children and youth
who are marginalised and have experienced only
negative male role models in their
family/community structures prior to their care
careers.
23From a Management Perspective
- There is also the issue of the various
complexities of future recruitment into
managerial positions as the Resident Managers
Association will increasingly have to import male
expertise holding related, but not social care,
qualifications.
24A College Perspective
- From an Institute perspective, there are also
stated implications for overall recruitment into
faculty. There are no males studying for
postgraduate degrees in social care in our
Department with the result that men will find it
increasingly difficult to obtain formal
tutoring/lecturing posts in the future.
25The 2003 National Study (near completion)
- Focus groups held and analysed with students from
Certificate to Degree level in 5 College sites
across the country - 350 Questionnaires across 5 Sites across the
country - Introductory chapters from North America
- Literature review
26A Female Perspective
- F1then your kinda saying that you want men in
but you only want them 'cause their womanly. That
doesn't make no sense altogether. You cant say
you want men in social care because their like
womenyou want men because they're men
27Preliminary Findings
- Over 35 themes have been extracted from the focus
groups which are common to all the interview sites
28Preliminary Findings
- The vast majority of participants stated that
they did not obtain enough information about
social care prior to embarking on their studies. - Both male and female participants agreed that the
perception amongst the public was that social
care is really female work and this is
considered by both to be limiting.
29Preliminary Findings
- Very significant stereotyping of male
practitioners exists. - Inappropriate assumptions have been made
about the type of work done in the field and the
category of client/s with whom one might work
30Preliminary Findings
- Social care mostly enters the media in a negative
connotation as with staffing problems in high
support units. - Males are fearful of having (sexual) allegations
made against them by clients and feel that
their agency will not support them
31A Way Forward?
- When the older voices first started in social
care/child and youth care, the role of men was
fairly clearly prescribed. Now, it seems, as
programmes have changed, the role for males is
less clear. Perhaps this is where we need to
begin if we are to attract more good men to the
field.
32What is Needed
- Young boys and girls need to have the experience
of meeting men, and women, who are able to
successfully inhabit their roles in ways other
than the traditionally defined ones. They need
to encounter men who are non-controlling,
emotionally less distant, able to explore self,
willing to engage in healthy emotional
relationships and capable of facilitation rather
than direction.
33Centre for Child and Youth Care Learning, AIT
- Amongst many other things
- Will act as a national focus point for males
studying social care programmes in much the same
way as dedicated mens groups