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Will your agency or students have the training to use the Internet
in practice?Human Services Online: A New Arena for Service Delivery
focuses on ways that Human Services are using the Internet for
service delivery, community education, collaboration, advocacy,
social change, and resource development. This valuable book
highlights the array of innovative services now being offered on
the Internet and provides guidelines and cautions for human service
professionals in using the Internet to enhance their services.Human
Services Online: A New Arena for Service Delivery provides
much-needed research and empirical evaluation related to human
service online activities and points to areas where future research
efforts should be directed. The book describes and evaluates
cutting-edge Internet-based services, ethical and legal threats to
agencies and consumers that may result from online activities, and
theoretical discussions of issues that impact human services as
consumers and human service agencies increasingly come
online.Topics addressed in Human Services Online: A New Arena for
Service Delivery include: online therapy/counseling online
fundraising online recruitment of volunteers and virtual volunteer
programs online consultation, continuing education, and training
ethical, legal, and liability issues related to Web sites and
online support online support groups and self-help online advocacy
and activism promoting access for under-represented populations use
of the Internet to impact specific social problems such as domestic
violence or HIV/AIDSHuman Services Online: A New Arena for Service
Delivery provides guidelines and specific suggestions for agencies
considering developing online services. The book examines model
programs and their effectiveness so that other agencies can
replicate them in their own areas, describes cutting-edge online
services that today's human services students will need to be aware
of as they enter the job market, and provides information for
agencies that will enhance their ability to solicit volunteers and
contributions on the Internet.
There has been exponential growth in use of the Internet to deliver
therapeutic and supportive human services. Online interventions are
known by a variety of names, including online practice, e-therapy
and others. All refer to the delivery of services over the Internet
through a variety of delivery systems including asynchronous email,
video and chat communication, and closed-circuit video
conferencing. They include services delivered by professionals such
as psychiatrists, social workers, psychologists, counsellors and
nurses as well as self-help groups with a therapeutic purpose and
supportive services provided by trained volunteers. This book
presents the most current research on online practice. Topics
include: descriptions of innovative online practice, evaluation
studies of online practice with specific disorders, meta-analysis
of the effectiveness of online practice, education and training of
online practitioners, methods for the delivery of online practice,
organizational policy and ethical issues related to online
practice, online crisis intervention and hotline services, and
considerations for meeting legal and ethical requirements of online
practice. This book was originally published as a special issue of
the Journal of Technology in Human Services.
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Various Artists - Greatest Hits (CD)
Jerry Finn, Stephen Street, Steve Lillywhite, Tony Visconti, Peter Asher; Performed by …
1
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R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Will your agency or students have the training to use the Internet
in practice Human Services Online: A New Arena for Service Delivery
focuses on ways that Human Services are using the Internet for
service delivery, community education, collaboration, advocacy,
social change, and resource development. This valuable book
highlights the array of innovative services now being offered on
the Internet and provides guidelines and cautions for human service
professionals in using the Internet to enhance their services.
Human Services Online: A New Arena for Service Delivery provides
much-needed research and empirical evaluation related to human
service online activities and points to areas where future research
efforts should be directed. The book describes and evaluates
cutting-edge Internet-based services, ethical and legal threats to
agencies and consumers that may result from online activities, and
theoretical discussions of issues that impact human services as
consumers and human service agencies increasingly come
online.Topics addressed in Human Services Online: A New Arena for
Service Delivery include: online therapy/counseling online
fundraising online recruitment of volunteers and virtual volunteer
programs online consultation, continuing education, and training
ethical, legal, and liability issues related to Web sites and
online support online support groups and self-help online advocacy
and activism promoting access for under-represented populations use
of the Internet to impact specific social problems such as domestic
violence or HIV/AIDSHuman Services Online: A New Arena for Service
Delivery provides guidelines and specific suggestions for agencies
considering developing online services. The book examines model
programs and their effectiveness so that other agencies can
replicate them in their own areas, describes cutting-edge online
services that today's human services students will need to be aware
of as they enter the job market, and provides information for
agencies that will enhance their ability to solicit volunteers and
contributions on the Internet.
There has been exponential growth in use of the Internet to
deliver therapeutic and supportive human services. Online
interventions are known by a variety of names, including online
practice, e-therapy and others. All refer to the delivery of
services over the Internet through a variety of delivery systems
including asynchronous email, video and chat communication, and
closed-circuit video conferencing. They include services delivered
by professionals such as psychiatrists, social workers,
psychologists, counsellors and nurses as well as self-help groups
with a therapeutic purpose and supportive services provided by
trained volunteers.
This book presents the most current research on online practice.
Topics include: descriptions of innovative online practice,
evaluation studies of online practice with specific disorders,
meta-analysis of the effectiveness of online practice, education
and training of online practitioners, methods for the delivery of
online practice, organizational policy and ethical issues related
to online practice, online crisis intervention and hotline
services, and considerations for meeting legal and ethical
requirements of online practice.
This book was originally published as a special issue of the
Journal of Technology in Human Services.
Everything the Alkaline Trio has done has been gut-punchingly great
and Good Mourning can sit proudly next to those other albums
without having to hover above them. In keeping with its title, Good
Mourning reveals and reinforces a peculiar Skiba trait: He rarely
sounds more alive than when he's singing about death, whether it's
the death of a relationship, or in the case of Good Mourning's
"This Could Be Love," his own demise. It was a dark year, explains
Skiba. "With the band it was great, but I definitely had some
things to write about. It feels good to get some of those things
off your chest rather than have them swimming around in your head
all the time. Aside from playing music with my friends and
traveling with my friends, getting those kind of things out has
become necessary for me." "We've already gotten leaps and bounds
beyond anything I would've imagined with this band," says Skiba.
"Hopefully this doesn't scare anybody away, and hopefully it
invites some new friends."
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