DEPARTMENTAL
INFORMATION
Teaching
and Learning
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Foundation
Generalist Social Work Practice
Augsburg
College social work faculty,
students,
and graduates dedicate ourselves to helping those who are most in need,
who are
most vulnerable, and whose social and economic welfare is most
threatened. To that
end, our faculty has defined
generalist social work practice as a model of ethical and effective
helping
based on the eco-systems perspective using problem-solving strategies
and
practice skills requiring a strengths perspective and cultural
competency to
serve individuals, families, groups, organizations or communities.
This model emphasizes
respect for client
self-determination and use of client strengths with empowerment as an
expected
client system outcome. This
practice
model provides a framework for assessment, intervention and change at
multiple
levels from personal to global. The
dual
goals of Augsburg’s generalist practice model are to address
private troubles and
to address the public issues that underlie them, especially poverty,
oppression, and injustice. To meet these dual goals, Augsburg students
become
skilled in direct practice as well as policy practice.
In the classroom and in the field, we apply
the generalist practice model to the wide range of difficulties people
face
with awareness of both assets and vulnerabilities within the person,
their
culture and their community. The
generalist model of social work practice assists practitioners in
establishing
collaborative relationships with people who use our services and other
constituents.
Students
learn a
sequential and collaborative process for identifying strengths and
stresses,
mutually setting goals, negotiating tasks, searching for an array of
possible
solutions and resources, implementing a plan of action, watching for
barriers
or by-passes, evaluating how helpful the work has actually been and adjusting the plan or
agreement to better
reach client goals. Issues
related to
the setting of practice, whether public or private, large agency or
small, are
commonly explored within the generalist practice model because it does
not
presume a particular setting or specialty.
Finally, a generalist practitioner will use
investigation and research
skills to inform and improve practice.
Augsburg’s
generalist practice model is
both individual and contextual,
both local and global, both personal and social.
Our
practice model assumes that clients
experience strengths and barriers, failures and successes. In the end clients can
marshal their
strengths while taking formative action towards their goals.
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