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	<title>social work &#187; social work careers</title>
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		<title>Learning Disability Related Careers</title>
		<link>http://www.jobs4socialwork.com/social-work-careers/learning-disability-related-careers</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Jan 2010 18:36:59 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[social work careers]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[More information is being discovered about learning disabilities everyday, and with this growth in knowledge comes an increase in the number of people diagnosed with scholastic difficulties. Because of this, professionals trained in helping people to overcome their learning problems are needed now more than ever. This is a fascinating field and if you choose [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>More information is being discovered about learning disabilities everyday, and with this growth in knowledge comes an increase in the number of people diagnosed with scholastic difficulties. Because of this, professionals trained in helping people to overcome their learning problems are needed now more than ever. This is a fascinating field and if you choose to take part in it, you can feel good about embarking on a career path that will enable you to help people in need improve the quality of their lives. There are a host of learning disability related jobs available, including:</p>
<p>1. Pediatrician<br />
A child&#8217;s doctor is often the primary line of defense against learning problems. Nowadays, pediatric tests are able to identify possible disabilities earlier than ever before. Still, if symptoms manage to keep themselves hidden for a while, as soon as they&#8217;re discovered, the pediatrician will be the first person that a child&#8217;s parent will contact. For example, if an 18-month-old child doesn&#8217;t seem to understand or respond to his or her parent&#8217;s speech, the parent may bring this up with their pediatrician, who will first test the child&#8217;s hearing. If his or her hearing is fine, then the child will be referred by the pediatrician to a speech pathologist.</p>
<p>2. Speech Pathologist<br />
These licensed professionals are trained to assess a child&#8217;s speech development and point out any potential problems. When a child is sent to a speech pathologist, he or she will be tested for the ability to speak and to understand the speech of others. If a problem is identified, the speech pathologist will suggest that he or she begin speech therapy as soon as possible, since the sooner a learning disability is dealt with, the easier it will be for him or her to make the transition to school.</p>
<p>3. Teacher<br />
The right instructor for your child will have the time and the training necessary to work with learning disabled students. This may be a general or special education teacher, depending on the severity of your child&#8217;s scholastic problems. General education teachers may obtain the necessary training from workshops or classes offered by private schools, nonprofit organizations, or learning centers that specialize in working with students who have scholastic difficulties. Special education teachers are trained to work with students who may have one or more of a variety of disabilities, including cognitive, physical, and social disorders.</p>
<p>4. Tutor<br />
Sometimes outside help is needed to assist your child in making the most of his or her educational opportunities. If this is the case, you may want to hire a specially trained tutor to teach your child the strategies that will allow them to interpret the information that is relayed to them in their schoolwork. Tutors may be independent contractors or work at learning centers. They might be former general or special education teachers, or they may have receive their training via workshops or classes.</p>
<p>Jane Saeman<br />
http://www.articlesbase.com/education-articles/learning-disability-related-careers-134052.html</p>
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		<title>Making Your Way: Opportunities in Social Services</title>
		<link>http://www.jobs4socialwork.com/social-work-careers/making-your-way-opportunities-in-social-services</link>
		<comments>http://www.jobs4socialwork.com/social-work-careers/making-your-way-opportunities-in-social-services#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Jan 2010 04:18:59 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[social work careers]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[An old proverb says: &#8220;Progress, not perfection.&#8221; Despite advances in technology and government, social problems persist&#8211;poverty, addiction, and limited access to healthcare continue to dog our civilization. It&#8217;s easy to feel overwhelmed, but you needn&#8217;t let it paralyze you. Every day, social service workers fight the good fight. If you&#8217;ve ever wanted to take some [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>An old proverb says: &#8220;Progress, not perfection.&#8221; Despite advances in technology and government, social problems persist&#8211;poverty, addiction, and limited access to healthcare continue to dog our civilization. It&#8217;s easy to feel overwhelmed, but you needn&#8217;t let it paralyze you. Every day, social service workers fight the good fight. If you&#8217;ve ever wanted to take some of the small steps that add up to big change, a career in social services may be right for you. Broadly speaking, social service is an umbrella term encompassing various careers. The common goal of social service work is to provide aid&#8211;legal, medical, financial, etc.&#8211;to those in need. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), community and social service occupations employed over 1.7 million as of May 2007. That number included occupations ranging from probation officers and correctional treatment specialists to social workers, school counselors&#8211;even marriage and family therapists. <strong>Growing Opportunity</strong>   One of the strongest incentives to enter a social service career is the rapid expansion of the employment opportunity. Over the next ten years, employment in many social service careers is expected to increase. Social workers, for example, should see employment increase 22 percent during between 2006 and 2016. Over the same period, marriage and family therapists, as well as substance abuse counselors should see a jump of 30 percent in employment. One social service career experiencing particularly rapid growth is geriatric care. Geriatric care may provide many career opportunities in the near future. According to Larry Minnix, CEO of the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging, in the next ten years, &#8220;geriatric care managers will be one of the most important roles in the whole health services delivery system.&#8221; The data on America&#8217;s rapidly expanding senior population seem to agree. By 2030, the number of Americans older than 65 is expected to reach 71 million. The Freedonia Group, a research firm, estimates revenue for elder care services should grow 6.6 percent annually through 2011.   <strong>Education for Social Service Careers</strong>   If you&#8217;re interested in pursuing a social service career, education is an important first step. Most social service careers require you to have some form of postsecondary training, and many require advanced degrees and state licensure. For example, social workers typically need a bachelor&#8217;s degree in social work (BSW) for entry-level positions. However, if you major in psychology, sociology, or a related field, you can also lay the academic groundwork for further career development&#8211;and college degrees, in social work. <a href="http://www.jobs4socialwork.com" target=_self>social workers</a> in clinical and healthcare settings (five in ten, according to the BLS) typically need master&#8217;s degrees. Similarly, if you&#8217;re interested in practicing as a counselor, a master&#8217;s degree is traditionally a must. If you wish to practice in the public employ, you may also need state licensure. Whatever the job, social work can be challenging, yet rewarding. In the words of Beverly Bernstein Joie, co-founder of Philadelphia-based Elder Connections (a nonprofit practice providing home help to the elderly), &#8220;This work satisfies two parts of myself: the part that loves to take care of people and the part that wants to be a businesswoman.&#8221; And that&#8217;s what really counts. After all, the most important requirement for social service work is a strong desire to help others. If you&#8217;re also emotionally mature, sensitive to the problems of others, and capable of forming strong, courteous relationships, you may already have what it takes&#8211;and ample reason&#8211;to make your way in social service. Kelli Smith http://www.articlesbase.com/college-and-university-articles/making-your-way-opportunities-in-social-services-707834.html &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;</p>
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		<title>Creating the Counsellor Mindset: a Career Overview</title>
		<link>http://www.jobs4socialwork.com/social-work-careers/creating-the-counsellor-mindset-a-career-overview</link>
		<comments>http://www.jobs4socialwork.com/social-work-careers/creating-the-counsellor-mindset-a-career-overview#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Nov 2009 14:27:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[social work careers]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Diverse values, specialist development, varied experiences, a unique mindset &#8211; mix it up and include a touch of interpretation and you have a human being with a social outlook. Leveraging differences between people is a daily necessity of living in societies, and leveraging our own perspective of the world – and others in it – [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Diverse values, specialist development, varied experiences, a unique mindset &#8211; mix it up and include a touch of interpretation and you have a human being with a social outlook. Leveraging differences between people is a daily necessity of living in societies, and leveraging our own perspective of the world – and others in it – is one of the utmost challenges in pursuing a healthy and balanced lifestyle.</p>
<p>So how do we detach from our past experiences and values to see the world from a clearer perspective? The answer is simple: we don’t. What we need to do is critically analyse our own process of thinking, and pursue reason and appropriateness in our actions. Whilst willingness to help is a premise for counselling, willingness to adjust is a professional requirement – and the following overlapping stages discuss the process of becoming an effective counsellor, facing its challenges, surviving the experience, and learning from it.</p>
<p><strong>Stage One: The Fundamentals of Professional Care</strong></p>
<p>There is a strong ethical component in any health-related profession, particularly ones which deal directly with consumers – in the case of counselling, the client. One of the most prominent aspects of becoming a professional counsellor lies in understanding the ethical guidelines of the profession, which in turn requires counsellors and prospective counsellors to be able to differentiate between ‘friendly advice’ and professional assistance. This is a challenging proficiency as it not only involves the process of learning which is intrinsic to any professional development (or training), but also remodelling the manner in which people naturally respond to a call for help: emotional and inevitably subjective feedback.</p>
<p>In order to cater for those needs, counsellor training involves a great deal of ethical background theory and practice which aims to develop the objective ‘eye’ – a demanded skill for counselling sessions. Such a methodical approach to interpreting human behaviour and individual needs is rooted in the development of early behavioural sciences.</p>
<p>Method in Counselling</p>
<p>What is ‘method’? Method (from Greek methodos or met hodos meaning “way across”) is a word which entered English in 1541 via French and Latin, and is defined as “a series of steps taken to complete a certain task or to reach a certain objective”. The methodical approach was induced by the need to share common guidelines in the observation and analysis of events, laying grounds for the advent of the scientific method – the central component of any modern science.</p>
<p>In the 19th century, the scientific method served to ‘unleash’ psychology from its bonds with philosophy and medicine – and the consequence was the advent of the original behavioural science. Counselling moved away from psychology and Freudian psychoanalysis in the early 1950s with the intent of enhancing the relationship between counsellor and client. The helping nature of the counselling approach set the standards for this newly adopted discipline – and increased focus was placed in nurturing the relationship with the client, encouraging client’s responsiveness, and developing a bond which would lay grounds for the client’s progressive development.</p>
<p><strong>Stage Two: Becoming an Effective Counsellor</strong></p>
<p>According to Meier and Davis (1997, p.61) “in no other profession does the personality and behavior of the professional make such difference as it does in counseling. Beginning counselors need to work at increasing their self awareness as well as their knowledge of counseling procedures. Your willingness to be open to supervision, to accept clients’ failures and criticisms, to participate in counseling yourself when appropriate, and to acknowledge your limits will contribute to your eventual success and satisfaction”.</p>
<p>Acknowledging Values</p>
<p>The client-counsellor relationship is fundamentally a relationship between two human beings. Obviously there are two different roles in the relationship but both counsellor and client have a history of experiences that have shaped who they are, how they view the world and what their values are.</p>
<p>An effective client-counsellor relationship does not ignore the “human” side of the profession. To establish trust, clients need to sense that the counsellors are genuine and sincere in their communications. But when they begin to suspect their own biases, conflicting values or judgements are influencing their work with a client, it is critical that they reflect upon this behaviour and seek to rectify it.</p>
<p>Critically reflecting in supervision, through journaling or personal inner work is required to establish an appropriate plan of action.</p>
<p>Recognising Limitations</p>
<p>It is easy for inexperienced counsellors to fall into the trap of feeling solely responsible for their client’s progress. Counsellors do not possess a magic wand to solve all of life’s problems and it is important to remember that ultimately it is the client that makes choices in their own life.</p>
<p>Counsellors can assist clients to think through options, explore motivators and hurdles, set goals, formulate plans of action and so on. A client, however, must assume the responsibility for taking actions in order to accomplish progress in their life.</p>
<p>There are many aspects of the counselling relationship in which it is important to recognise the limitations of counselling. When progress seems “stuck”, some of the best plans involve tolerating ambiguity, sharing responsibility with the client, re-establishing the role of the counsellor and/or sharing information with a supervisor.</p>
<p>Drawing the Line</p>
<p>Maintaining a critical perspective towards the counsellor-client relationship is essential in order to avoid emotional burnout, misjudgement and unproductive distribution of power. “A common mistake for beginners is to worry too much about clients. There is a danger of incorporating clients’ neuroses into our own personality. We lose sleep wondering what decisions they are making. We sometimes identify so closely with clients that we lose our own sense of identity and assume their identity. Empathy becomes distorted and militates against a therapeutic intervention” (Corey 2001, p. 34).</p>
<p><strong>Stage Three: Dealing with Challenging Situations</strong></p>
<p>One of the foremost challenges facing counselling professionals is to understand the complex role that diversity plays in their work. In counselling, each client’s needs and objectives should be considered and used to guide the counselling process. These needs vary for each individual according to factors such as personality, culture, gender and age.</p>
<p>Counselling with Difference</p>
<p>It is vital that counsellors working with issues of difference recognise the unique needs of their client and plan intervention accordingly. The counsellor must decide on the approach that will provide better responsiveness from the client, and therefore lead to a constructive outcome.</p>
<p>Clients affected by systems of inequity in our culture are frequently subjected to acts of discrimination and prejudice. Counsellors need to understand the impact of such in order to analyse the depth to which a client may be culturally traumatised. Prejudice impacts on self-esteem and may evoke imbalances in a client’s wellbeing. They may experience feelings of being left out of the larger group, feelings of powerlessness, loneliness and hopelessness.</p>
<p>Working with Groups</p>
<p>Group counselling is a challenging and dynamic form of counselling that requires all-round professional skills from counsellors. It implies that any challenges a counsellor may find in helping an individual can potentially duplicate, triplicate, or vastly multiply – however, the more intricate the challenge is, the higher the rewards.</p>
<p>Similar to mathematics theory, the dynamic interactions which occur within a group, along with the external influencing factors upon that group, pose challenges to controlling and interpreting group outcomes. When dealing with groups, the primary objective (whether a group is formed to develop a project or a group united by the need to tackle an analogous problem) is to ensure that the group is healthy and productive. As such, core communication skills which are based on interpersonal communication theory are applicable for groups – promoting good communication between group individuals creates a safe and productive environment for the group to work.</p>
<p>When dealing with groups, there are several major issues that should be noted by professional counsellors, such as:</p>
<p>1. Understanding power relationships – in other words – how the interaction between counsellor and the group’s individuals impact interpersonal relationships;</p>
<p>2. Consciously avoiding generalisations and stereotypes;</p>
<p>3. Accepting that all people are multi-dimensional;</p>
<p>4. Making judgements exclusively on situationally relevant criteria;</p>
<p>5. Adopting communication patterns which minimise stereotyping and increase dignity and respect to induce more appropriate decisions (based on information relevant to the particular context) and;</p>
<p>6. Consciously controlling group communication which is likely to aggravate negative perceptions by others.</p>
<p>The Unfaithful Mind</p>
<p>Counsellors are also faced with situations in which their own personal perspective creates a challenge in their relationships with clients. A client’s personality, behaviour or opinion may diverge from the counsellor in such a radical way that it becomes a motive for dislike or disassociation. It is a complex situation which requires the counsellor to reflect on their own capabilities of dealing with such situation.</p>
<p>The risk of developing hatred against ‘opposing’ groups of society can perpetuate negative behaviour – a kind of traumatic response to what has been perceived as a threat. Recognising value in the individual is part of the process of developing the client’s self-confidence through providing a supportive environment during counselling sessions.</p>
<p>What is the solution? Primarily, the counsellor will need to reflect on whether he/she is able to restrain his/her own negative feelings towards the client and work together in a productive manner. If he/she decides that it is feasible, strategies need to be devised in order to avoid conflict and lack of alignment in the relationship goals. If the counsellor believes that it is not appropriate to deal with the client due to personal motives, there should be a contingency plan to refer that client to appropriate support and ensure that this process is done efficiently – without incurring in any psychological harm to the client.</p>
<p><strong>Stage Four: Learning and Perpetuating</strong></p>
<p>Dealing with human behaviour is never a static process. Learning from each experience is the secret to naturally widen one’s perspective towards the world, improve one’s ability to understand people and to effectively communicate with them. Therefore, learning also plays a big role in the process of developing a positive counsellor perspective. How to improve learning? The best way is to construct a disciplined approach is be attentive to details and situations which produce unexpected results in counselling sessions and other interaction with clients. Learning through observation is of considerable value in terms of experience and maturity for a counsellor.</p>
<p>Perpetuating constitutes the maintenance of the basic backbone that allows a counsellor to be a productive and efficient professional: mental and physical health. Counsellors are deemed to deal with stress throughout their careers – whether through emotional attachment, excessive work, lack of self-care, or a combination of these factors. It is of vital importance that counsellors avoid burnout because emotional stress tends to accumulate overtime and it can result in trauma. All these issues directly affect the counsellor’s ability to oblige to ethical and professional guidelines.</p>
<p>Most people ignore the first signs of excessive stress, and by doing so, become vulnerable to further pressure from work. At some point, counsellors may find it very difficult to attend counselling sessions, to get to work, and to perform in several other areas of life. Preventing burnout is simply a necessary task to anyone aiming for a balanced and fulfilling career (and life).</p>
<p>References:<br />
Scientific Method Wikipedia. Retrieved on: 14/08/2006 &#8211; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_method.<br />
Meier, S., &amp; Davis, S. (1997). The Elements of Counselling. Pacific Grove: Brooks/Cole.<br />
Corey, G. (Ed). (2001). Theory and Practice of Counselling and Psychotherapy. Wadsworth: Thomson Learning.</p>
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<p>Pedro Gondim<br />
http://www.articlesbase.com/psychology-articles/creating-the-counsellor-mindset-a-career-overview-139863.html<span></span></p>
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