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Learning Objectives and Supported Competencies

Overview

 


Children and Youth: Overview


It is important in decision-making, policy development, and the
establishment of new programs in Social Work that these initiatives
be supported by scientific evidence. Evidence-based practice is based
on evaluation research that highlights interventions that have been
found to be effective. Establishing the evidence-base involves either
consulting secondary reviews of studies or synthesizing the results of
single studies.

This module covers the emerging area of evidence-based Social Work
with an emphasis on Children and Youth. It provides an opportunity to gain
a comprehensive overview of concepts in best evidence, to understand
distinctions between evidence-based Medicine and evidence-based Social
Work, to explore resources that provide evidence-based practice
information, and to develop techniques for searching and finding
research to support best evidence in the field of Children and Youth.

Because some areas of Social Work "research are descriptive and (lack) a
critical perspective...it may be difficult to find evaluative research on
outcomes of methods...Sources of Social Work knowledge are diverse, with
ogranizations, policy makers, professionals and users making valuable
contributions, alongside research." (Braye, S. & Preston-Shoot, M., 2007
p. 313-315). This module will try to deal with gaps and weaknesses in the
knowledge base when compared to health sciences, other kinds of
research to use if Randomized Control Trials and Systematic Reviews are not
available, and broader questions of values and ethics that also inform
practice in Social Work.

[Source: Braye, S. and Preston-Shoot, M. (2007). On systematic reviews in Social Work:
Observations from teaching, learning and assessment of law in social work education.
British Journal of Social Work 37 (313-334) ]

Implied in the graph below is a hierarchy of Research Methods, with methodologies
in medicine considered at a higher level than methodologies in Social Sciences:

 
Social Sciences
Medicine
Research Methodology

Case Studies

Randomized Control Trails
Cross-sectional Surveys
Clinical Trials
Case Controlled Studies
Meta-analysis
Cohort Stiudies
Systematic Review
Literature Review

[Source: Cournoyer, B. (2004). The evidence-based Social Work Skills Book.
Boston,Pearson/Allyn and Bacon.]


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Link to the Mirlyn CatalogLink to DatabasesLink to Search SiteLink to the University Library GatewayLink to the School of Social Work

Suggestions for improving this tutorial are encouraged. Please share your suggestions with
Sally Haines
. Last updated 12 November 2008.

 
 
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