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Children and Emotional Abuse is a research-informed learning
resource for students in social work about the dynamics and
consequences of psychological abuse-especially as it occurs in
dysfunctional families and affects children and adolescents.
Emotional abuse is still not widely understood or recognized.
Helping professionals need to recognize emotional abuse, understand
the damage it does, the theories that account for it, and be
prepared to help children and families where the abuse often occurs
along with physical and sexual abuse. This text will draw upon
current peer-reviewed literature and evidence-based studies and
summarize essential information to prepare students for careers in
helping professions. Each chapter will also contain brief vignettes
to illustrate some of the key points. This book is for courses in
child welfare and child abuse/neglect, as well as other social work
courses that focus on children.
Children and Emotional Abuse is a research-informed learning
resource for students in social work about the dynamics and
consequences of psychological abuse-especially as it occurs in
dysfunctional families and affects children and adolescents.
Emotional abuse is still not widely understood or recognized.
Helping professionals need to recognize emotional abuse, understand
the damage it does, the theories that account for it, and be
prepared to help children and families where the abuse often occurs
along with physical and sexual abuse. This text will draw upon
current peer-reviewed literature and evidence-based studies and
summarize essential information to prepare students for careers in
helping professions. Each chapter will also contain brief vignettes
to illustrate some of the key points. This book is for courses in
child welfare and child abuse/neglect, as well as other social work
courses that focus on children.
Praised by instructors and students alike, PROGRAM EVALUATION: AN
INTRODUCTION, International Edition helps your students evaluate
services and programs that they will encounter in their
professional practice. In the process of learning evaluation
techniques and skills, students will become proficient at
critically analyzing evaluation studies conducted by others. The
authors present and simplify all the essentials needed for a
critical appreciation of evaluation issues and methodology. The
authors' clear writing style and clear presentation of concepts, as
well as the text's hands-on and applied focus, will guide students
on how to gather evidence and demonstrate that their interventions
and programs are effective in improving clients' lives.
Statistics for Social Workers: Essential Concepts provides students
with a reader friendly introduction to statistics and an engaging
exploration of how statistics can enrich their future social work
practice. The text is practical and conceptual in nature, focusing
less on mathematical computation and more on the general
information and skill sets that will prove beneficial in
professional work. The text demonstrates how statistics can help
students understand relevant social issues and obtain insights to
their clients' problems by looking at data. Readers learn
statistics can bring to light trends and needs in their
communities, provide them with information they can use in funding
applications, aid in their own development of client and staff
reports, and enhance their overall practice. Dedicated chapters
cover ethical considerations, measures of central tendency, normal
distribution, inferential statistics, hypothesis testing,
correlation, selecting the appropriate statistical test, and more.
Throughout the text, excerpts from real-world studies, review
problems for students, and potential assignments facilitate deep
learning and practical application. Designed to demystify
statistics for students and help them develop into evidence-based
practitioners, Statistics for Social Workers is an ideal resource
for social work students.
Research Methods in Social Work helps students develop
evidence-based practice by involving them in the process of
research methodology. An innovative storytelling approach follows
two students engaged in internships who go through the steps and
tasks required to design a program and evaluate it in their
practicum. Readers can see how realistic decisions arise in
planning research and the activities necessary to support and
conduct a research effort. Students learn the importance of
comparison group designs, operationalizing variables, the use of
valid and reliable measurements, and how these can affect the
obtained results. Specific topics include research ethics,
developing questionnaires and instruments, techniques for selecting
client and community samples, and evaluating one's practice with
single system designs. This edition features a new focus on
understanding the statistical procedures, symbols, and findings
commonly found in research publications. Instructor and student
friendly, it contains self-review questions as well as potential
assignments. Research Methods in Social Work prepares students to
successfully consume social work research and lays the foundation
for those who may want to create research during their academic and
professional careers.
Child Welfare and Child Protection: An Introduction prepares future
child welfare professionals to tackle the complex and challenging
work associated with responding to child maltreatment. Developed by
a former child protection professional and a social work scholar,
this book draws upon current research and features cases that
simulate those child welfare professionals are likely to encounter
in the field. After an historical examination of the evolution of
child protection in the United States, the book focuses on
understanding the causes of child maltreatment and risk assessment.
Readers are presented with a compelling case and the opportunity to
see how it develops over the course of three chapters that address
the investigative process, the delivery of ongoing services to
assist families in addressing high-risk behaviors, and helping
children achieve timely permanency when returning home is not an
option. Other chapters present foster parent and foster child
perspectives, additional considerations for special needs
populations, and suggestions for working effectively on a child
protection team. Every effort is made to prepare readers for the
stresses and strains associated with working in child protection,
including a dedicated chapter on self-care. Featuring foundational
and critical information for future professionals, Child Welfare
and Child Protection is well-suited for introductory undergraduate
and graduate courses.
A Beginner's Guide to College Success is designed to address a wide
range of topics that are of interest to aspiring or new college
students, including financial decisions, choosing an area of study,
adapting to new responsibilities, managing time wisely, and more.
The guide begins by introducing the reader to the way college is
structured and walking the reader through the preparations required
to embark upon a college career. Preliminary chapters help the
reader explore the value of a college education, begin to consider
a major, and better understand the role credits, grades, and
degrees play in the higher education system. Later chapters address
the challenges different types of students-military veterans, those
with disabilities, and student athletes, to name a few-may face as
they transition from high school to college. These chapters also
cover best practices for communicating with faculty members,
succeeding in large lecture classes, dealing with reading
assignments, how to get the most out of online learning, and more.
The guide closes with a collection of chapters dedicated to
studying, preparing for exams, and taking advantage of campus
resources, including the library, to bolster personal learning.
Full of tips and practical advice, A Beginner's Guide to College
Success is a useful resource for any student considering college
and wondering how it differs from high school.
Who lives where in Florida, and how do they vote? This
authoritative guide to the demographics of this unique state looks
at each of its 120 state House districts up close, with information
about who lives there, and how they've voted in recent elections
and why. It's a detailed, must-have guide for anyone working in
Florida politics, or just interested in the political demography of
one of the nation's most dynamic states. From the conservative
Navy-town of Pensacola to bastions of Democratic voting in Fort
Lauderdale and Miami, and everything in between, The News Service
of Florida's Political Almanac of Florida tells the story of the
state's voters: who they are, where they came from, and how they're
likely to cast their ballots.
DONNE RIGHTING POETRY While his duties as a language teacher keep
him close to his suburban sanctuary, DAVID ROYCE PHILLIPS revels in
his journeys both real and imagined. His real ones have taken him
overseas reading poetry from Paris to Prague. As a graduate student
at McMaster University, David wrote his Masters thesis on poet
Charles Baudelaire. His own poetry can be found in Canadian Author,
Canadian Writer's Journal, Hamilton Spectator, Tower, Tidepool, Top
40 Anthology, Arts Beat Magazine and Kairos.
Title: The History and Antiquities of Stow, etc.Publisher: British
Library, Historical Print EditionsThe British Library is the
national library of the United Kingdom. It is one of the world's
largest research libraries holding over 150 million items in all
known languages and formats: books, journals, newspapers, sound
recordings, patents, maps, stamps, prints and much more. Its
collections include around 14 million books, along with substantial
additional collections of manuscripts and historical items dating
back as far as 300 BC.The HISTORY OF BRITAIN & IRELAND
collection includes books from the British Library digitised by
Microsoft. As well as historical works, this collection includes
geographies, travelogues, and titles covering periods of
competition and cooperation among the people of Great Britain and
Ireland. Works also explore the countries' relations with France,
Germany, the Low Countries, Denmark, and Scandinavia. ++++The below
data was compiled from various identification fields in the
bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as an
additional tool in helping to insure edition identification: ++++
British Library Royce, David; 1861. 96 p.; 8 . 10352.h.27.
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Needs Assessment (Paperback)
David Royse, Michele Staton-Tindall, Karen Badger, Matthew Webster
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R1,281
Discovery Miles 12 810
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In today's rapidly changing world, new social and human service
problems emerge constantly, and in order to make good use of
resources that are often limited, social service agencies must
ensure that their services are truly needed. Needs assessments
provide a baseline against which later results can be compared, and
may also assist policy-makers in recognizing new trends or problems
on the horizon. With so much hinging on their outcome, these
assessments must be conducted both accurately and efficiently, and
this pocket guide will give practitioners the ability to do so.
Written by a group of social work scholars with a collective wealth
of experience in conducting needs assessments at all levels, this
practical guide will walk readers step by step through the process
of selecting the right design to confidently conducting the
assessment, meticulously analyzing data, and finally writing a
cogent report. In addition, the authors explore the various
approaches that can be used to assess the needs of a client or
population group and the differences between large- and small-scale
assessments. Later chapters in the book include discussions of
emerging technologies in the field as well as abundant social work
case examples.
Social work graduate students, as well as social workers in the
field who need to brush up on their skills, will find this book an
invaluable aid.
PROGRAM EVALUATION, 6th Edition helps readers learn how to evaluate
services and programs that they will encounter in their
professional practice. In the process of learning evaluation
techniques and skills, readers will become proficient at critically
analyzing evaluation studies conducted by others. The authors
present and simplify all the essentials needed for a critical
appreciation of evaluation issues and methodology. The book's clear
writing style and clear presentation of concepts, as well as the
its hands-on and applied focus, will guide readers on how to gather
evidence and demonstrate that their interventions and programs are
effective in improving clients' lives. This edition's up-to-date
coverage includes a greater number of references to current
literature, emphasizing that consulting the literature is an
important step in recognizing, developing, and evaluating
evidence-based practice or research-informed practice.
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