Buch, Englisch, 276 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 227 mm, Gewicht: 486 g
Buch, Englisch, 276 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 227 mm, Gewicht: 486 g
ISBN: 978-0-231-15136-8
Verlag: Columbia University Press
Small social groups are fundamental for achieving personal growth, social development, socialization, and the skills of sustaining relevance, relationships, and connections to society. Unfortunately, those who would benefit most from small groups often find themselves unable to achieve membership. Lacking the necessary skills for entry, these individuals may never enjoy the advantages of group membership.
Advancing a practice methodology that specifically targets the socially unskilled, Norma C. Lang provides much-needed guidance to practitioners helping individuals become part of group life. Grounded in extensive practice, Lang's methodology addresses the special needs and anomalous functioning of individuals who lack the skills to form and use groups. She outlines the unique pregroup processes of socially unskilled populations and provides a methodology for advancing social competence. She also identifies the professional and agency requirements for working with presocial processes. Widely applicable to practice with social work groups, Lang's method greatly expands the literature on social work theory and practice with individuals and groups.
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PrefaceAcknowledgmentsIntroductionPart 1 Social Competence and Social Noncompetence 1. The Concepts of Social Competence and Social Noncompetence2. Individual Social Competence: The Necessary Condition for Group Forming and Group Functioning3. Forms of Socially Noncompetent Interaction Requiring Special Adaptations to Social Work Practice with GroupsPart 2 Group Work Practice Theory Essential to Practice with Both Socially Competent and Socially Unskilled Populations 4. The Small Group in Life and in Social Work Practice: Forms and Functions5. Concurrent Interventions in Multiple Domains: The Essence of Social Work with Groups6. The Social Work Group as Unique Social Form: Influence of Professional Norms7. A Broad-Range Model of Practice in the Social Work Group: Group Forms and Worker Technology8. The Mainstream Model of Practice in Social Work Groups9. A Specialized Practice Methodology to Promote Social CompetencePart 3 A Specialized Practice Methodology for Socially Unskilled Populations 10. Features of the Specialized Methodology for Practice with Socially Unskilled Individuals and Entities11. Requirements for a Specialized Practice with Socially Unskilled Populations12. Specifics of Intervention in the Pregroup Period with Socially Unskilled Populations: Adaptations to the Technology of Social Work with Groups13. The Centrality of Actional Modes: Mobilizing Effectance14. The Route to an Achievable Entity: How the Specialized Practice Evolves15. Portrait of Practice with a Socially Unskilled PopulationReferencesIndex