'Through no fault of their own': Social work students' use of language to construct 'service user' identities

被引:10
作者
Skoura-Kirk, Eleni [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kent Canterbury, Sch Social Policy Sociol & Social Res, Div Study Law Soc & Social Justice, Medway Campus,Gillingham Bldg, Gillingham ME4 4AG, England
关键词
Service user involvement; intepretative repertoires; social work education; discourse analysis; identity; INTERPRETATIVE REPERTOIRES; PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY; CARER INVOLVEMENT; EDUCATION; KNOWLEDGE; ATTITUDES; GAP;
D O I
10.1177/14733250221088208
中图分类号
C916 [社会工作、社会管理、社会规划];
学科分类号
1204 ;
摘要
The way social workers discursively construct 'service user' identities in everyday interactions (interviews, conversations and text) can affect quality of relationships and practice outcomes. Even though research has focused on the construction of 'service user' identities by professionals and service users, little has been done to explore such discursive formulations by pre-qualifying social work students. This is especially relevant, given the strengthening of the 'expert by experience' identity in social work education. This paper seeks to make visible mechanisms of student identity constructions as to 'who a service user is', and implications for practice through the examination of student written work pre- and post- a module focussing on lived experience. A critical discursive psychology approach was followed, recognising the interplay between localised professional encounters and wider contexts of power relations. The findings show a shift in the 'service user' identities employed by the students mainly based on individualistic discourses and deserving/undeserving themes (substance misuse the result of vulnerability, rather than selfishness, domestic abuse narratives denoting resilience rather than victimhood). The effect to practice showed shifts between the reflective, expert, person-centred and critical/radical practitioner, mainly stressing the need for professional growth at an individual level, with less emphasis on addressing social inequality. The paper argues that predominantly individualistic discourses can perpetuate de-politicised or oppressive categorisations of 'service users' and calls for further critical engagement with the discursive micro-practises enacted and developed in the social work classroom, if we are to unveil and challenge narrow, or stigmatising categorisations early on.
引用
收藏
页码:700 / 719
页数:20
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