1st Edition

Problems, Tasks and Outcomes The Evaluation of Task-Centered Casework in Three Settings

    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    In the 1980s, although most social workers organised their time and described their work in terms of cases, research studies had cast serious doubts on the efficacy of working in this way. As a result, there had been growing anxiety about what social workers do, what they ought to do, and the training they needed.

    Task-centred casework was an approach to social work which proposed a solution to some aspects of this dilemma. Growing out of the surprising results of an American research study, it broke free from the traditional psycho-analytic approach to casework. It aimed at clarity of purpose, a concentration on the clients’ perceptions of the problems, openness about clients’ and helpers’ intentions and agreement about what is to be done and achieved within a specified time.

    Originally published in 1985, this book brings together three British studies that accompanied, and in some respects pioneered, the introduction of task-centred casework into the United Kingdom. The studies describe and evaluate task-centred casework with social services department clients, with young people on probation, and with men and women referred to hospital after poisoning themselves. The research suggests what task-centred casework can and cannot achieve, describes how clients experience it and seeks to define the skills it requires. The studies also provide some reasons why many previous studies of social work have failed to find evidence for social work effectiveness.

    The book uses much case material to illustrate methods of task-centred casework and its outcomes as seen by clients, social workers, and an independent outsider. It should still be of interest to social workers, teachers of social work, and social work students. More generally, it will be welcomed by all those who are interested in building social work on a surer basis than anecdote and fashion.

    Introduction.  Part I: Task-Centred Casework in Two Intake Teams by Ian Sinclair and David Waller  1. Introduction to Part One  2. Clients and Outcomes  3. Process and Outcome  4. What Determines Outcome?  5. Summary of Part One: Implications and Conclusion  Part II: Task-Centred Casework in a Probation Setting by E. Matilda Goldberg and Stephen J. Stanley with the assistance of Jenny Kenrick  6. Evaluating the Effectiveness of Probation  7. Setting and Aims of the Project  8. Sample and Flow of Referrals  9. Throughput and Analysis of 100 Short-Term Probation Orders  10. Task-Centred Casework in a Probation Setting  11. Problems and Tasks  12. Outstanding Features of Task-Centred Intervention  13. Task Achievement and Problem Outcome  14. Factors Associated with Successful Outcome  15. Summary of Part Two  16. Conclusions of Part Two  Part III: Task-Centred Social Work After Parasuicide by Jane Gibbons, Irene Bow and Janet Butler  17. Parasuicide: Trends and Characteristics  18. Social Work Methods and Parasuicide  19. The Experiment  20. The Results of the Trial  21. Task-Centred Work with Clients who Repeated Overdose  22. Making Contracts in Task-Centred Work  23. Implications of Research.  Conclusion.  Appendix to Part II.  Appendix to Part III.  Index.

    Biography

    E. Matilda Goldberg, Jane Gibbons, Ian Sinclair