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Putting Analysis Into Child and Family Assessment, Third Edition: Undertaking Assessments of Need 3rd Revised edition [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 247x182x13 mm, kaal: 439 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Mar-2016
  • Kirjastus: National Children's Bureau Enterprises Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1909391239
  • ISBN-13: 9781909391239
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 247x182x13 mm, kaal: 439 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Mar-2016
  • Kirjastus: National Children's Bureau Enterprises Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1909391239
  • ISBN-13: 9781909391239
Teised raamatud teemal:
Packed with tools and ideas to enhance analytical thinking when making child and family assessments, this book covers every stage of the assessment process. It addresses planning, hypothesising, involving children, and making, recording and reviewing decisions. This third edition has been updated to reflect policy changes and new research findings.

Putting Analysis into Child and Family Assessment bridges theory and practice, and provides clear guidance to improve assessments in child and family social work. It addresses the issues of central concern to child and family social workers, including analytical assessment, outlines how to avoid common pitfalls, provides strong theoretical foundations, and demonstrates how the theory can be translated into practice. With reference to common and specialist assessments, the book covers every stage of the assessment process: planning and preparation, hypothesising, involving children, and making, recording and reviewing decisions. It features practice tools, case studies and practice development sessions and activities. This third edition has been fully updated with recent policy changes and new research findings. This book will be valued by practitioners, managers, trainers and lecturers looking for a grounded resource which provides practical guidance on how to improve assessments.

Arvustused

Praise for second edition: As social workers are striving to push back the excessive levels of bureaucratisation and increase the space for professional practice, this excellent book offers easily understood ways to improve critical reasoning skills and will be useful for individuals, teams, and agencies. -- Professor Eileen Munro, Social Policy Department, London School of Economics The third edition of this excellent resource is most welcome. Putting Analysis Into Child and Family Assessment takes a clear and practical approach to a crucial yet complex area of practice. Practitioners and trainers alike will find this a really valuable support to best practice. -- Duncan Helm, Senior Lecturer, School of Applied Social Science, University of Stirling It provides an excellent review of a wide range of evidence and theorizing and touches on many key theoretical issues, but it combines this with practical implications and tasks to support students or experienced workers to develop their skills and knowledge. In doing so it provides a great introduction to assessment - while indicating where readers can go if they wish to explore issues in greater depth or find more evidence in relation to a particular issue. -- Donald Forrester, Professor of Child and Family Social Work and Director of the CASCADE Centre for Childrens Social Care, Cardiff University Putting Analysis Into Child and Family Assessment (3rd ed) by Ruth Dalzell and Emma Sawyer, continues to be the kind of book that I use on a regular basis. It is written and presented in a way that provides a great example of how to analyse in practice. Set within a contemporary social work policy and practice context, it identifies and examines the key elements of analytical assessments separately and in relation to each other. It offers accessible theory, research and evidence, models, tools and exercises that allow practitioners, students, tutors, practice educators and trainers to reflect upon their practice and continue to develop and build upon their knowledge base. An excellent resource. -- Ruth Neville, Principal Lecturer in Social Work, University of Huddersfield This book is undoubtedly a brilliant starting point...overall, this book is a very useful addition to the social-work literature and in particular to those writing assessments within the court environment. -- Mark Sloman * Seen and Heard, Volume 26, Issue 2 *

Muu info

The essential guide to improving assessment practice in child and family social work
Foreword 9(2)
Donald Forrester
Foreword 11(2)
Cheryl Burton
Acknowledgements 13(2)
Introduction 15(2)
Who is the toolkit for?
15(1)
How can it be used?
15(1)
What is in the toolkit?
16(1)
1 The assessment process in context
17(8)
Background
17(4)
Wider context
21(2)
Putting Analysis into Assessment project
23(2)
2 Preparing for and planning assessments
25(30)
Preparing oneself -- the reflective mindset
25(17)
Planning and hypothesising
42(13)
3 Conducting the assessment
55(96)
Needs analysis
55(13)
Risk and resilience
68(18)
Signs of Safety
86(17)
Involving children
103(24)
Assessing need and risk for children in chronic situations
127(24)
4 Making, recording and reviewing decisions
151(38)
Decision-making
151(13)
Recording and reporting
164(13)
Reviewing decisions -- critical decision method
177(12)
5 Team development activities
189(16)
6 Challenges and opportunities for analytical practice
205(10)
Lessons from the project that still resonate
205(2)
Reflection and analysis in multi-agency contexts
207(1)
Creating and sustaining an environment for continuous practice development
208(7)
References 215(8)
Further reading 223(4)
Resources and useful information 227(4)
Subject Index 231(4)
Author Index 235
Ruth Dalzell has social work skills in field work, family placements and youth justice gained during 12 years of direct social work practice with children and families and has considerable experience in individual and group work with children, young people and adults. At National Children's Bureau for nine years she instigated, managed and delivered practice development projects, consultancy, policy activity, conferences, seminars and training courses and developed a well-regarded network for children's services managers and planners. Ruth has published widely on practice development issues for children's services. She now works as a consultant.

Emma Sawyer has worked as a social worker, manager and trainer, she has extensive experience of working with children and families with complex and challenging needs. Whilst working for National Children's Bureau, Emma published several resources on how services can best work together to support parenting more effectively.