5 results match your criteria: "Social Welfare Research Centre[Affiliation]"

The Effects of Skill Training on Social Workers' Professional Competences in Norway: Results of a Cluster-Randomised Study.

Br J Soc Work

July 2016

Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Social Welfare Research Centre, Stensberggate 29, Post Box 4, St. Olavs Plass, N-0130 Oslo, Norway.

Using a cluster-randomised design, this study analyses the effects of a government-administered skill training programme for social workers in Norway. The training programme aims to improve social workers' professional competences by enhancing and systematising follow-up work directed towards longer-term unemployed clients in the following areas: encountering the user, system-oriented efforts and administrative work. The main tools and techniques of the programme are based on motivational interviewing and appreciative inquiry.

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Dialogical communication and empowering social work practice.

J Evid Inf Soc Work

December 2016

a Social Welfare Research Centre, Faculty of Social Sciences , Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Oslo , Norway.

How to succeed in facilitating for empowering processes within social work practice is a central topic in both theoretical discussions and regarding its principles in practice. With a particular focus on how dialogical communication can play a part in order to practice empowering social work, through this text the author frames HUSK as a project facilitating the underpinning humanistic approaches in social work. Dialogical communication and its philosophical base is presented and recognized as a means to achieve empowering social work as well as highlighting the importance of the humanistic approach.

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As part of a course on changing attitudes developed by KREM, a Norwegian service user organization, narratives are used to explore and understand identity formation. The process is based on the role of shame in the lives of those whose life experiences lead to a reliance on government social benefits to sustain themselves. Shame is identified as an obstacle that affects everyday life and undermines one's capacity to take actions that can lead to and support self-sufficiency.

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Speaking vulnerable issues into existence: their consequences for psychotherapy1.

Scand J Public Health Suppl

October 2005

Social Welfare Research Centre, Faculty of Business, Public Administration and Social Work, Oslo University College, Oslo, Norway.

Background: Healthcare has traditionally been dominated by norms making the sexual orientation of clients invisible.

Aim: To explore processes counteracting or promoting invisibility.

Method: A single case study based on notes from psychotherapy and a research interview.

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