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The Practice Of Macro Social Work (Revised) |
List Price: $85.95
Your Price: $85.95 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating:  Summary: not that you have a choice Review: If you are buying this book, you probably have to because it is assigned reading. This was a very frustrating read. It was both preachy and repetitious. There was one model that he repeatedly used for every role of the macro social worker. After 3-4 times of this, I was asking myself, "didn't I read this before?" after 6-7 times I was ready to pull my hair out. By the time the course was over, even our instructor was telling us to skim the chapters, that we'd read this before.
I typically keep all of my textbooks, but I am definitely selling this book. It was a complete waste of time.
Rating:  Summary: Practice of Macro Social Work: A Challenge for the Future Review: The field of social work is overwhelmingly oriented to clinically based counseling and psychotherapy. In agreement with Harry Specht and Mark Courtney, Brueggemann sees this as a wrong direction that the field of social work has taken. In this textbook, he advocates that social work return to its original mission--that of macro social work practice. Brueggemann defines macro practice in the most comprehensive way of any modern social work textbooks, as the"practice of solving social problems and making social change at the community, organizational, societal and global levels. He follows up this definition by dividing his text into four sections, each of which begins with a theoretical description. The first section, solving social problems and making social change includes provocative chapters on social problems, social problem solving, and social leadership. The following three sections each deal with community, organizaitonal and societal/global social work respectively. Community social work covers community planning, community development, and community organization. Organizational social work includes program development, administration and organizaiton development. Social work at the societal and global levels comprise chapters on social policy, social action and social movements, and international social work. The book also contains a wealth of resources in three appendices aimed at encourgaging students to get personally invovled in helping people and explore the field in more depth by means of computer ancillaries. Not only does the textbook explore the entire field of macro social work practice, but it does so in a way that encourages students to critique assumptions about modern society and about social work itself. It rejoices in the rich history of the social work profession and helps students understand its heritage. Finally, the author unswervingly asserts that social workers should "never do for others what they can do for themselves." This, Brueggemann asserts, is the iron law of macro social work.
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