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MAKING SOCIAL WORK TRAINING COMMUNITY BASED

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Title: MAKING SOCIAL WORK TRAINING COMMUNITY BASED


1
MAKING SOCIAL WORK TRAINING COMMUNITY BASED
  • Lessons from Kerala, India
  • Palakkappillil J.

2
CRITIQUE OF SOCIAL WORK TRAINING PRACTICE
  • Social Work is often equated to voluntary
    work, social service or the kind of
    interventions made by a politician.
  • Social Work Training in India since 1936
  • More or less American in thinking and inputs
  • Past 70 years of professional Social Work

3
CRITIQUE OF SOCIAL WORK TRAINING PRACTICE -2
  • Copying the American Model
  • Training based on a clinical and residual
    approach to problem solving
  • The entire approach assumed an urban or
    urbanising community.
  • The reality of the rural India very minimally
    addressed.

4
CRITIQUE OF SOCIAL WORK TRAINING PRACTICE -3
  • Opportunities for Social Workers in the state
    welfare schemes very minimal
  • Very minimum influence on policy formulation
  • A sizeable section migrates to countries like
    UK, US, Ireland, Australia and Newzeland.
  • A struggle between activist idealism and
    worker pragmatism

5
EXPERIMENTS IN MAKING COMMUNITY THE BASE
  • Premise Community and its needs should form the
    basis of training and practice
  • As opposed to learning methods out of community
    contexts

6
EXPERIMENT 1 A PPP in Poverty Alleviation
Mission
  • Context Kerala, the most literate state, said
    to be a development model
  • State Governments Poverty Alleviation Mission.
  • Kutumbasree Mission (literally Family
    Prosperity)
  • An MoU with the Mission for student trainee
    participation

7
Kutumbasree Mission
  • Identification of the poor 9 point index
  • Organising the poor in their neighbourhoods (NHG)
  • Women of the neighbourhood as the focus of
    community organisation
  • Training for initiating IGPs through SHGs

8
The Role of Social Work Trainees
  • Designation Voluntary Executives of Kutumbasree
    (VEK)
  • Access to communities and documents in a
    semi-official capacity
  • Upgradation of units lagging behind
  • Improvement in performance through training
  • Identifying training needs.

9
The Role of Social Work Trainees -2
  • Sorting out conflicts
  • Liaising with the Local Administration in the
    implementation of various schemes

10
Implications for Social Work Training
  • Making training more community based
  • Direct access to community its needs, and
    resources
  • Direct access to a government programme
  • Practice of the various methods of Social Work -
    Work with Individuals, Groups and Communities
    within a given community
  • Possibilities for auxilliary methods

11
Implications for Social Work Training -2
  • Familiarisation with policy implications
  • Understanding the need for political action
  • Remarkable improvement in the efficiency of the
    programme
  • Replicated all over the state.

12
EXPERIMENT 2
  • Premise Social Workers are to be change agents.
  • Practice Experience Social Workers function as
    system maintenance workers

13
Involvement in Peoples Struggles
  • The New Development Scenario
  • Development induced displacements
  • Dams, High Ways, Speed ways, SEZ

14
Involvement in Peoples Struggles -2
  • Visits to the affected communities
  • Interaction with the leaders of the struggles
  • Providing the people in struggle a space for
    expression.
  • Expressions of solidarity joining a sit in,
    fast, or protest march (voluntary)

15
Impact on Training
  • Getting to know the seamy side of development
  • Awareness about rights rights beyond the
    framework of client rights in services.
  • Possibilities of Social Action for change

16
EXPERIMENT 3 Livelabs
  • Concept of live labs
  • Field action projects in child protection child
    rights womens empowerment and development
    community based experiments in the care of the
    aging natural resources management and
    conservation

17
Impact on Training
  • The growth of the school from a teaching centre
    to a centre of teaching and practice.
  • Possibilities of direct interaction with many
    practitioners
  • Association with various practice units
  • Involvement in various community based programmes
    (especially through camps)

18
Impact on Social Work Training
  • Help in familiarising the trainees with the
    actual context of practice.
  • Adapting the established methods to community
    context with a fair amount of success.

19
Implications for Social Work Practice
  • Immense possibilities of research
  • Need for theory building
  • Need for evolving new methods for a development
    context
  • Need for greater focus on social policy a much
    neglected area by SW profession.

20
  • THANK YOU
  • MERCI

21
9 Point Poverty Index Urban Revised 2000 onwards
  • Dilapidated House / No house
  • Less than 5 cents of Land / No Land
  • No Sanitary Latrine
  • No access to safe drinking water within 150
    meters
  • Women headed house hold
  • No regular employed person in the family
  • Socially Disadvantaged Groups SC/ST
  • Mentally retarded / Disabled / Chronically ill
    member in the family
  • Families without colour TV

A family having at least four of the above
factors is classified as a Family at Risk or
a Poor Family
22
9 Point Poverty Index (Revised - Rural)
  • No Land /Less than 10 cents of Land
  • No house/Dilapidated House
  • No Sanitary Latrine
  • No access to safe drinking water within 300
    meters
  • Women headed house hold/ Presence of a widow,
    divorcee / abandoned lady / unwed mother
  • No regularly employed person in the family
  • Socially Disadvantaged Groups(SC/ST)
  • Presence of Mentally or physically challenged
    person / Chronically ill member in the family
  • Families with an illiterate adult member

A family having at least four of the above
factors is classified as a Family at Risk or
a Poor Family
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