Social Work Practice with Groups: A Clinical PerspectiveThis book provides a unique and compassionate perspective on group social work with a focus on clinical settings. In an open and user-friendly style, author Kenneth Reid offers practical, day-to-day strategies to help social workers work with people in small groups in a way that is therapeutic, growth producing, and life-enhancing. In addition to integrating small-groups theory and therapeutic principles, Social Work Practice with Groups also offers: numerous clinical examples that bring the material alive and into context, "Notes to Myself" vignettes that begin with each chapter and relate the author's experience to the topics in the chapter while they convey a piece of personal and practical wisdom, and a focus on the "personhood" of the group leader, which explores how the practitioner's own personality, development, and life situation are brought into the therapeutic relationship. |
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Page 10
... learning how to take care of their babies • Adults learning how to deal with their aged parents • Adults , separated from their spouses , learning about the divorce process and what they can anticipate Is an educational group considered ...
... learning how to take care of their babies • Adults learning how to deal with their aged parents • Adults , separated from their spouses , learning about the divorce process and what they can anticipate Is an educational group considered ...
Page 211
... learning to cope with their environment . Second , individuals learn better through action and behav- ior than through inactivity . Third , cognitive learning by individuals follows the awakening of all their senses through stimulating ...
... learning to cope with their environment . Second , individuals learn better through action and behav- ior than through inactivity . Third , cognitive learning by individuals follows the awakening of all their senses through stimulating ...
Page 251
... LEARNING The gains achieved by group members need to be consolidated and transferred through intentional action beyond the therapeutic process . This transfer of learn- ing must not be left to chance but done in a deliberate way , using ...
... LEARNING The gains achieved by group members need to be consolidated and transferred through intentional action beyond the therapeutic process . This transfer of learn- ing must not be left to chance but done in a deliberate way , using ...
Contents
Groups to Help People | 1 |
Objectives of Group Work | 8 |
Summary | 17 |
Copyright | |
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acceptance action activities anger Angie anxiety become beginning behavior Behavioral rehearsal bers challenge client clinical co-leaders communication conflict confrontation coping Corey counseling countertransference deal defenses discussion effective emotional empathy encounter groups encourage environment evaluation example expectations experience express fear feedback feelings focus frustration functioning goals going group dynamics group leader group mem group members group process group psychotherapy group session group therapy group treatment group worker group's development group's purpose hospital individual individual's interac interaction interpersonal issues learning listen lives means meeting nonverbal observes occurs pain participants patients patterns person potential practice practitioner problems professional psychiatric hospitals questions reactions reality relationship responsibility rience self-disclosure sense share situation skills small groups social workers someone specific staff stage talk termination themes therapeutic therapist thoughts tion transfer of learning trust understand verbal worker needs YWCA