레이블이 Social Studies Games인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 Social Studies Games인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2013년 11월 24일 일요일

About 'social worker studies'|...for Obama, the Black Social Worker - as a lark! They already...Catholic church is big on Social Work, and have been...Negro Man! This film should be studied over and over. It shows...







About 'social worker studies'|...for Obama, the Black Social Worker - as a lark! They already...Catholic church is big on Social Work, and have been...Negro Man! This film should be studied over and over. It shows...








Are               you               exploring               career               choices?

Are               you               trying               to               decide               what               to               major               in?

Are               you               a               college               student               and               wondering               if               a               degree               in               Human               Development               and               Family               Studies               would               be               a               good               choice?

Are               you               curious               if               majoring               in               HDFS               is               a               good               selection               for               someone               who               wants               to               help               others?

Many               colleges,               such               as               Texas               Tech               University               of               Lubbock,               offer               a               bachelor's               degree               in               Human               Development               and               Family               Studies.

Students               take               courses               in               areas               such               as               child               development,               psychology               and               more.
               However,               some               of               those               graduates,               years               later,               regret               their               choice               of               major.

If               they               had               to               do               it               all               over               again,               they               would               not               have               chosen               a               degree               in               Human               Development               and               Family               Studies.

But,               there               are               also               many               students               who               were               happy               they               selected               a               degree               in               HDFS.
               If               you               are               wondering               if               a               degree               in               Human               Development               and               Family               Studies               is               the               career               choice               for               you,               the               following               points               below               might               help               you.
               A               degree               in               HDFS               is               better               than               no               degree               at               all.
               A               BS               degree               in               Human               Development               and               Family               Studies               is               not               a               complete               waste.

It               is               better               than               an               associate's               degree,               and               is,               of               course,               more               ideal               than               no               degree               at               all.
               A               degree               in               Social               Work               or               Early               Childhood               Education               is               probably               a               better               choice               for               someone               wanting               to               find               a               job               immediately               upon               graduation.
               If               you               want               to               find               a               great               job               right               after               you               graduate,               it               is               best               to               not               major               in               HDFS.

While               many               people               do               find               jobs               with               just               a               BS               degree               in               HDFS,               many               do               not.

Some               will               find               a               job,               but               it               has               nothing               to               do               with               the               major.
               However,               with               a               degree               in               Social               Work               you               will               have               many               more               job               opportunities.

Many               social               service               agencies               prefer,               or               even               require,               that               employees               have               degrees               in               Social               Work.

If               you               are               considering               social               work,               please               read               "Is               a               Career               in               Social               Work               Right               For               You?"               and               "Ten               Tips               for               College               Social               Work               Majors."
               Also,               a               degree               in               Early               Childhood               Education               can               pretty               much               guarantee               you               a               job,               as               long               as               you               are               flexible               with               location.

But,               as               many               HDFS               graduates               will               tell               you,               employment               with               just               a               bachelor's               degree               in               HDFS               is               a               little               tricky.
               There               are               many               HDFS               graduates               who               land               jobs               at               CPS               and               private               agencies               and               do               succeed.

However,               statistically,               it               is               a               wiser               choice               to               choose               a               different               major.
               If               you               are               planning               to               go               to               graduate               school,               a               degree               in               HDFS               is               adequate               in               most               cases.
               If               you               have               already               decided               you               are               going               to               attend               graduate               school               following               college,               then               a               degree               in               HDFS               will               possibly               be               the               choice               for               you.

While               you               might               need               to               take               some               additional               courses,               you               can               get               into               many               graduate               programs               (such               as               occupational               therapy)               with               a               BS               in               HDFS.

You               could               also               become               a               social               worker               and               earn               an               MSW.

You               could               even               become               a               speech               pathologist               or               occupational               therapist.

You               could               also               apply               to               Physician's               Assistant               school.
               However,               to               be               honest,               another               degree               might               be               a               better               fit               in               some               cases.

For               example,               if               you               intend               to               become               a               speech               pathologist,               then               a               bachelor's               degree               in               Speech               Pathology               is               obviously               the               wiser               choice.

Also,               if               you               want               to               become               a               Physician's               Assistant,               a               degree               in               biology               or               chemistry               would               be               a               better               selection.
               If               you               plan               to               become               a               stay-at-home               mom,               HDFS               might               be               the               choice               for               you.
               If               you               are               currently               married,               and               your               goal               is               to               become               a               stay               at               home               mom               (which               is               a               fantastic               choice),               then               a               degree               in               Human               Development               and               Family               Studies               would               be               fine.

Your               classes               will               help               you               to               be               a               better               parent.

And,               you               can               still               find               employment               if               necessary,               with               the               degree.
               If               you               are               not               married               or               dating               anyone,               it's               better               to               choose               something               that               has               more               career               possibilities.

It               could               take               you               a               few               years               to               find               Mr.

Right.
               If               you               want               to               make               a               lot               of               money,               HDFS               is               not               a               good               degree               choice.
               If               you               want               to               be               a               millionaire,               then               a               degree               in               Human               Development               and               Family               Studies               is               definitely               not               the               choice               for               you.

Nearly               all               jobs               available               with               a               degree               in               HDFS               pay               very               modest               salaries.

For               example,               if               you               choose               to               become               a               CPS               caseworker               (which               in               many               states               a               degree               in               HDFS               is               sufficient),               your               starting               salary               will               be               roughly               $36,000               a               year.
               These               are               just               a               few               points               to               consider               before               choosing               to               major               in               Human               Development               and               Family               Studies.

If               you               are               still               exploring               careers,               please               read               "Job               Ideas               for               People               Who               Like               to               Help               Others."               You               might               also               look               at               "Jobs               and               Career               Ideas               for               Creative               People."
               Some               other               career               articles               to               read               are               "Jobs               that               Pay               $50,000               to               $100,000               a               Year."               and               "Jobs               That               Pay               Over               $100,000               a               Year."               Some               additional               articles               to               browse               are               "Jobs               that               Pay               Well               Over               a               Million               Dollars               a               Year"               and               "High               Demand               Science               Jobs               that               Pay               Over               $60,000               a               Year."
               One               of               the               best               activities               that               can               help               you               decide               on               a               career,               is               to               participate               as               a               job               shadow.

Take               a               look               at               "How               to               Find               a               Job               Shadow               Experience"               for               more               insight.
               Good               luck               with               your               future               endeavors!
               SOURCES:
               Personal               Experience               With               Helping               Friends               
               www.payscale.com







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    2013년 11월 23일 토요일

    About 'social worker studies'|Home Study Renewal - Getting ready for social worker visit







    About 'social worker studies'|Home Study Renewal - Getting ready for social worker visit








    I               am               twenty               years               of               age,               I               attend               a               well-known               university,               my               grades               are               solid,               and               I               rarely               worry               about               money.

    I               have               a               good               number               of               friends,               I               find               myself               attractive               enough,               and               at               any               job               interview               I               can               smile               and               cheerfully               display               the               characteristics               of               a               motivated,               hard               worker.

    To               an               outsider,               I               am               a               thriving               individual               whose               development               has               progressed               normally,               and               though               I               may               experience               the               occasional               upset,               overall               there               is               not               too               much               I               can               complain               about.

    In               contrast               to               what               one               might               expect               given               this               apparently               excellent               adaptation               to               life,               last               summer               I               had               to               change               my               plans               due               to               personal               difficulties.

    As               I               began               another               summer               working               at               a               small               summer               camp               that               I               had               attended               and               loved               since               I               was               nine               years               old,               I               found               myself               plagued               with               the               symptoms               of               my               post-traumatic               stress               disorder.

    This               disorder               began               after               an               event               I               experienced               nearly               a               decade               ago,               when               a               stranger               on               the               street               attacked               me               with               a               knife.

    Through               intensive               therapy               and               the               support               of               my               parents,               I               have               worked               hard               to               make               my               panic               attacks               and               nightmares               subside.

    For               many               years               I               remained               functional               in               the               sense               that               I               rarely               missed               classes               and               maintained               strong               friendships               with               a               number               of               peers.

    Nonetheless,               because               this               camp               was               also               the               site               of               a               second               attack               the               summer               before               (the               significance               of               which               I               had               minimized),               the               panic               attacks               came               back               in               the               most               debilitating               form               I               had               ever               experienced.

    I               was               forced               to               abandon               my               role               as               a               head               counselor               and               run               away               to               Ithaca.
                   In               light               of               the               accumulating               research               on               the               term               "resilience,"               I               have               wanted               to               relate               these               findings               to               my               own               experience.

    However,               the               process               of               doing               so               has               not               been               simple.

    Masten               (2001)               defined               resilience               as               a               "class               of               phenomena               characterized               by               good               outcomes               in               spite               of               serious               threats               to               adaptation               or               development"               (p.

    228).

    According               to               Masten,               one               of               the               fundamental               assumptions               that               this               concept               relies               on               is               that               a               risk               must               be               posed               to               the               individual               with               the               possibility               of               a               negative               outcome               due               to               the               risk.

    In               this               regard,               one               could               certainly               consider               my               experience               to               qualify               as               a               potential               risk               factor.

    Werner               (1996)               suggests               that               there               are               three               types               of               risk:               risky               environments               that               one               might               grow               up               in,               sustained               conditions               of               stress,               and               concentrated               childhood               traumas.

    The               latter               seems               to               describe               my               experience,               since               I               was               attacked               at               a               vulnerable               age               and               feared               for               my               life.
                   However,               although               this               experience               has               put               me               at               risk               for               negative               developmental               outcomes,               it               is               not               clear               whether               or               not               I               should               be               categorized               as               "resilient."               Masten               (2001)               speaks               of               "good               outcomes"               (p.

    228)               in               her               definition               of               resilience.

    Studies               on               resilience               discuss               such               outcomes               as               including               being               well               liked               by               others,               having               a               reflective               cognitive               style,               being               caring               of               others,               enjoying               school,               and               possessing               the               ability               to               regulate               one's               emotions               (Werner,               1996).

    But               what               if               one               shows               some               of               these               possible               qualities,               and               not               others?

    Masten               (1999)               alludes               to               the               controversy               surrounding               how               we               evaluate               and               define               resiliency,               arguing               that               it               is               not               obvious               who               should               define               what               is               considered               a               "good"               outcome               and               what               is               not.

    In               this               regard,               a               question               occurs               to               me               concerning               those               who               demonstrate               a               majority               of               these               positive               outcomes.

    In               these               cases,               despite               the               fact               that               these               qualities               are               present,               can               we               assume               that               the               developmental               trajectories               we               see               are               wholly               positive?
                   It               is               based               on               this               last               question               that               I               believe               a               key               argument               lies:               there               may               be               a               part               of               the               population               that               is               neglected               in               the               literature               on               resilience.

    This               subgroup               is               one               that               has               experienced               risk               and               probably               has               a               number               of               what               the               literature               notes               to               be               the               most               prevalent               protective               factors               in               countering               this               risk.

    Members               of               this               group               exhibit               positive               developmental               outcomes,               and               as               a               result               are               deemed               to               be               "resilient."               However,               what               separates               this               group               from               other               "resilient"               survivors               is               that               these               people               may               not               in               fact               be               resilient;               they               may               only               appear               to               be               so               because               they               have               been               socialized               to               be               compliant               or               they               have               used               work               or               school               as               an               outlet               for               their               negative               feelings.

    Thus,               one               might               be               productive               in               class               because               of               the               use               of               work               to               distract               oneself               from               painful               or               frightening               feelings.

    Failing               to               act               out               through               external               means               (via               drug               use,               delinquent               behavior,               etc.)               may               reflect               compliance               to               society               and               parental               norms,               rather               than               an               intrinsic               motivation               to               steer               clear               of               risky               behavior.

    Fergusson               &               Lynskey               (1996)               use               a               cutoff               point               based               on               the               number               of               negatively               external               behaviors               one               exhibits               in               order               to               determine               resiliency;               if               this               is               the               case,               what               do               we               do               about               those               who               do               not               externalize               their               behavior?
                   Brown               (2005)               explored               the               world               of               the               white,               middle-class               girl               -               a               girl               who               could               likely               become               a               member               of               this               neglected               subgroup.

    In               her               study,               Brown               compared               a               group               of               low-income               female               students               with               those               who               fell               into               the               middle               socioeconomic               range.

    As               she               worked               with               these               students,               Brown               noticed               that               while               the               lower-income               girls               tended               to               show               their               feelings               outwardly               and               misbehave,               the               middle-income               girls               had               been               socialized               to               hide               their               emotions               as               they               strived               to               work               well               in               school.

    Although               resiliency               was               not               a               concept               that               was               explored               in               Brown's               study,               one               could               hypothesize               that               girls               in               this               group               might               be               easily               neglected               by               the               research               on               resilience.

    Despite               the               possibility               of               adverse               events,               these               middle-class               girls               would               be               expected               to               do               well               regards               to               school,               having               friends,               and               being               well-liked,               which               would               lead               to               the               appearance               of               positive               outcomes,               even               if               some               of               the               outcomes               were               not               positive               at               all.

    As               I               read               this               article,               I               could               not               help               but               relate               to               these               girls               and               wonder               if               I               might               fit               into               this               subgroup.
                   If               this               is               the               case,               then               it               does               not               come               as               a               surprise               to               me               that               I               do               not               know               whether               or               not               to               define               myself               as               "resilient."               In               terms               of               the               previously               listed               positive               outcomes               derived               from               Werner's               (1996)               work,               with               the               exception               of               regulating               emotions               well,               I               seem               to               show               all               the               signs               of               being               resilient.

    Additionally,               in               regards               to               the               resources               available               to               me,               Rury               (2005)               speaks               of               the               importance               of               social,               human,               and               cultural               capital               in               promoting               positive               outcomes               for               children.

    It               is               clear               that               my               socioeconomic               status,               education,               and               the               supportive               parenting               I               have               had               give               me               high               amounts               of               these               types               of               capital.

    Despite               all               these               odds               that               are               working               in               my               favor,               however,               I               still               find               myself               having               potentially               debilitating               experiences               based               on               the               risk               factor               I               was               exposed               to.

    I               work               to               hide               my               disorder               from               those               around               me,               out               of               fear               of               being               perceived               as               a               less               able               member               of               society.

    Furthermore,               while               my               interest               in               learning               is               genuine,               for               many               years               in               high               school               I               struggled               to               keep               distance               from               my               feelings               by               becoming               a               hard               working               overachiever.

    Though               I               appeared               resilient,               inside               I               was               suffering.
                   My               experience               therefore               provides               possible               evidence               for               the               existence               of               a               subgroup               in               our               population               that               may               be               silenced               in               the               research               on               resilience.

    Furthermore,               my               story               highlights               another               possible               question               that               may               face               all               of               those               who               are               faced               with               risks:               when               do               risks               accumulate               to               the               point               where               they               become               intolerable?

    Werner               (1996)               speaks               of               the               "challenge               model."               In               this               model,               a               peak               is               reached               at               which               risk               factors               cease               to               promote               development               and               begin               to               impair               it.

    It               seems               that               the               nature               of               this               peak               could               have               a               dynamic               interaction               with               the               components               of               the               environment               it               is               situated               in;               for               example,               through               therapy               I               began               to               find               a               way               to               make               my               traumatic               experience               manageable,               but               when               I               was               exposed               to               memories               of               my               second               attack,               the               effects               became               debilitating.

    For               one               of               the               first               times               in               my               life,               I               began               to               show               that               I               was               not               as               resilient               as               I               had               portrayed               myself               to               be:               I               needed               to               leave               camp               and               escape.

    Is               it               possible,               therefore,               that               the               challenge               model               could               be               used               to               explain               why               these               unrecognized               voices               in               the               resilience               literature               become               unmasked?

    Can               these               voices               only               be               heard               when               life               becomes               so               hard               that               they               are               left               with               no               choice?
                   References
                   Brown,               L.M.

    (2005).

    In               the               bad               or               good               of               girlhood:               Social               class,               schooling,               and               white               feminities.

    In               L.

    Weis               &               M.

    Fine               (Eds.),               Beyond               silenced               voices:               Class,               race,               and               gender               in               United               States               schools.

    Albany:               State               University               of               New               York               Press.
                   Fergusson,               D.M.

    &               Lynskey,               M.T.

    (1996).

    Adolescent               resiliency               to               family               adversity.

    Journal               of               Child               Psychology               and               Psychiatry,               37,               281-292.
                   Masten,               A.S.

    (1999).

    Resilience               comes               of               age:               Reflections               on               the               past               and               outlook               for               the               next               generation               of               research.

    In               M.D.

    Glantz,               J.

    Johnson,               &               L.

    Huffman               (Eds.),               Resilience               and               development:               Positive               life               adaptations               (pp.

    282-296).

    New               York:               Plenum.
                   Masten,               A.S.

    (2001).

    Ordinary               magic:               Resilience               processes               in               development.

    American               Psychologist,               56(3),               227-238.
                   Rury,               J.L.

    (2005).

    Education               and               social               change:               Themes               in               the               history               of               American               schooling.

    New               Jersey:               Erlbaum               Associates.
                   Werner,               E.E.

    (1996).

    Protective               factors               and               individual               resilience.

    In               J.P.

    Shonkoff               &               S.J.

    Meisels               (Eds.),               Handbook               of               early               childhood               intervention,               2nd               edition.

    Cambridge:               Cambridge               University               Press.






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