Social workers' reflexive understandings of their "everyday" communications with children

被引:2
作者
Hadfield, Mark [1 ]
Ruch, Gillian [2 ]
Winter, Karen [3 ]
Cree, Viviene [4 ]
Morrison, Fiona [5 ]
机构
[1] Cardiff Univ, Sch Social Sci, Cardiff, S Glam, Wales
[2] Univ Sussex, Sch Educ & Social Work, Brighton, E Sussex, England
[3] Queens Univ Belfast, Sch Social Sci Educ & Social Work, Belfast, Antrim, North Ireland
[4] Univ Edinburgh, Sch Social & Polit Sci, Social Work, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
[5] Univ Stirling, Ctr Child Wellbeing & Protect, Stirling, Scotland
基金
英国经济与社会研究理事会;
关键词
child care; communication; professional agency; social work; VIDEO;
D O I
10.1111/cfs.12703
中图分类号
D669 [社会生活与社会问题]; C913 [社会生活与社会问题];
学科分类号
1204 ;
摘要
Over the past two decades, the use of ethnographic research methods, in combination with a range of discursive, conversational, and multimodal analytical approaches, have provided vivid accounts of the complex nature of social workers' everyday communication. This paper discusses the potential and the problems of combining a video-stimulated recall methodology with an explicit theoretical framework, in order to generate critical reflexive "insider" accounts of social workers' direct encounters with children. The framework employed was based on an adaptation of Goffman's concepts of "framing" and "footing," which were integrated into an analytical process designed to theorize social workers' critiques regarding the nature of their communication with children. Three detailed case exemplars are used to demonstrate the potential of this methodology to explore the "delicate" agency required by social workers in the practice of authentic communication in complex professional inquiries with children. The paper concludes with a brief discussion of the theoretical and practical issues associated with utilizing reflexive methodologies in professional contexts.
引用
收藏
页码:469 / 477
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [2] Social Workers and Broadband Advocacy: Social Justice and Information Communications Technologies
    Kuilema, Joseph
    SOCIAL SCIENCE COMPUTER REVIEW, 2013, 31 (03) : 291 - 305
  • [3] The construction of the unmotivated client as a tool for solving the dilemma between control and reflexive approaches of social workers working with vulnerable children in the Czech Republic
    Mikulcova, Katerina
    Richterova, Bohdana
    Kowalikova, Ivana
    Kubickova, Hana
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK, 2024, 27 (01) : 18 - 29
  • [4] Containment: Exploring the concept of agency in children's statutory encounters with social workers
    Morrison, Fiona
    Cree, Viviene
    Ruch, Gillian
    Winter, Karen Michelle
    Hadfield, Mark
    Hallett, Sophie
    CHILDHOOD-A GLOBAL JOURNAL OF CHILD RESEARCH, 2019, 26 (01): : 98 - 112
  • [5] PRESENT REASONS IN THE DILEMMA SOLUTION SOCIAL WORKERS FACE IN THEIR PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE EVERYDAY LIFE
    Ramirez, Uva Falla
    Gomez, Sandra Del Pilar C.
    Rodriguez, Ramiro B.
    ELEUTHERA, 2014, 10 : 146 - 159
  • [6] Respect or empowerment? Alternative understandings of 'listening' in childcare social work
    McLeod, Alison
    ADOPTION AND FOSTERING, 2006, 30 (04) : 43 - 52
  • [7] Children's Perspective on Social Workers' Questioning Practices
    Sorensen, Kresta Munkholt
    Jacobsen, Charlotte Bredahl
    Koustrup, Cecilie
    CHILD & FAMILY SOCIAL WORK, 2024,
  • [8] Social workers' perceptions of children's right to participation
    Kosher, Hanita
    Ben-Arieh, Asher
    CHILD & FAMILY SOCIAL WORK, 2020, 25 (02) : 294 - 303
  • [9] Emotional Labour in Social Workers Encounters with Children and Their Families
    Winter, Karen
    Morrison, Fiona
    Cree, Viviene
    Ruch, Gillian
    Hadfield, Mark
    Hallett, Sophie
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK, 2019, 49 (01) : 217 - 233
  • [10] Tuberculosis in children and adolescents: Strategies for social workers' interventions
    Gonzalez, Norma E.
    Angueira, Luciana
    ARCHIVOS ARGENTINOS DE PEDIATRIA, 2017, 115 (06): : E391 - E396