Social workers spend each day dealing with traumatic events and problems that few families ever have to face. From handling adoptions to dealing with eating disorders, social workers have significant stress and responsibilities in their work life. To find new ways to deal with social problems, individuals can read the following books. These books include some of the most common problems faced by social workers and the people that they serve. 1. Breaking Night by Liz Murray This book is actually a memoir of Liz Murray 's experiences. As a child, she was raised by parents who were mentally ill and addicted to drugs. Neglected for most of her life, she eventually ended up living on the streets. Murray 's life finally turned around when she was given a scholarship by the New York Times to go to Harvard University. This memoir is an interesting insight into the world that many children face when their parents have addictions or disorders. For social workers who want to understand the personal impact of traumatic upbringings, this is the book to choose. 2. Children and Adolescents in Trauma: Creative Therapeutic Approaches Written by Chris Nicholson, this book offers creative approaches to different social problems. A variety of experts and experienced social workers have included their stories in …show more content…
Unlike most stories, Lois Metzger 's book is actually told in the voice of the eating disorder. Mike Welles has just started high school, but things are quickly becoming difficult at his home. While life spirals out of control, he uses anorexia to take control again. The voice in his head pushes him to use his eating disorder to overcome the problems that are holding him back. Throughout the novel, readers will see what an eating disorder is like for young men. While plenty of books have been written about girls and eating disorders, this is one of the few and the best about a male with an eating
World War II, the second war Hitler was vanquished in but different battles. WWII Hitler decided to kill off all Jewish people, he wanted to wipe out their whole existence. But from all of this destruction came forth a man who was to tell their story, a boy who lost everything to a man who wanted Jewish people dead. Elie Wiesel, was the boy that was there from the start of this war against genocide. Elie have consequently written the book “Night” which tells his tale of the war moreover his survival.
“Night” by Ellie Wiesel is a memoir of Ellie’s years during the Holocaust at the Nazi’s concentration camps. The book is his true story telling about the death of his friends and family,what he encountered, and how he started to lose faith in God. Ellie experienced many instances of dehumanization like when the Germans threw bread, and when he was cruelly punished. When the Front was moving closer to the camps, the Nazis moved Ellie and the others to Buchenwald. When they arrived, many Germans were watching the train while laughing and throwing bread.
Night is the memoir of what Elie Wiesel experienced in the Holocaust as a teenager. A concept that recurs throughout the memoir is dehumanization. In Night, Wiesel skillfully tells his experience, from beginning to end, of the Nazis isolating the Jews from the rest of the world,
Dr. Bruce Perry began his book The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog: And Other Stories from a Child Psychiatrist's Notebook – What Traumatized Children Can Teach Us About Loss, Love, and Healing with a statement about children and their resilience. Much like what we discussed in class, Dr. Perry touched on how children were thought to be naturally resilient and that they seemed to bounce back quickly. However, he continued with the statement that even the slightest bit of stress can impact an infant's development. Likewise, we discussed numerous things that can impact the welfare of children, such as attachment, education, and poverty.
Break of Dawn Ellie Wiesel once said “There may be times when we are powerless to prevent injustice, but there must never be a time when we fail to protest.” In the book Night Ellie Wiesel explained his experience of World War II. From being at home with nothing to worry about, to being in Auschwitz. In Ellie’s novel Night a tragic theme is dehumanization. Throughout the novel examples of dehumanization occur when the Hungarian police transported them in cattle cars, when the German soldiers stripped them of their valuables, and they worked them worse than animals, more like machines.
Loaded into cattle trains on their way to an uncertain destination it's so crammed that it's impossible to sit down so they must take turns. Two days pass and they have crossed the hungarian border and are now in Germany. A German officer has informed them that their were 80 people in the car and if anybody goes missing they will all be shot like dogs. In the dead of night a woman named Mrs.Schächter begins to scream and throw a fit because she was separated from her husband and all of a sudden begins to scream that she sees fire an awful fire. The Jews in the car try to help Mrs.Schächter by explaining that the visions are not real and then they are fed up and begins to beat her with hits strong enough to kill her.
Social workers have several responsibilities. They have to provide service, justice, and dignity to a client. They have to possess integrity, competence, and patience. Social workers need to possess knowledge of human rights, and how to perform scientific inquiry. Social workers occasionally have cases in which problems ensue and a solution is not found within a certain time frame.
It is packed with heart-wrenching moments that make the reader feel his pain. For instance, Sheff is always worried sick when his son disappears without saying where he’s going. One particular time, when Jasper asks where his older brother is, Sheff responds, “with more emotion than I intended to betray: ‘We don’t know.’ Jasper begins to cry” (Sheff 101). This moment makes the audience feel for Sheff and his family, because it is a new side of the common addiction story that has more impact emotionally than one may think.
Before pursuing a degree in social work, my main interest was in early childhood education. I was a part of the Early Childhood Academy at my high school and had the opportunity to volunteer for a number of child care centers. Oftentimes, some of the youth in foster care that would come for after-care would share their experiences of abuse and neglect with me. I began to acquire knowledge of what some of those children were facing. I also went to school with quite a large amount of classmates that had some history of childhood trauma.
The mother started when she was young, “smoking grass and sniffing glue”, but as the years went on and she passed through different friends and groups, it lead to worse habits and it didn’t stop. Father came from a middle class catholic family. He grew up as a lonely child as he grew apart from his family. He was the unfortunate one when he grew up, riding the bus to school while everyone else was driving themselves. The environment he lived in caused him to become a drug addict unfortunately.
Being a social worker is often a challenging, yet rewarding career. Social workers are responsible for helping individuals, families, and groups of people to cope with problems they’re facing to improve their patients’ lives. Social workers are also trained caseworkers in social service agencies who perform several functions which they use different components of the practice framework, the theoretical underpinnings to in order to build helping relationships. After interviewing a caseworker in a specific social agency there were advantages and disadvantages of methods along with challenges encountered in working in that specific agency. With all of this the functions, roles and responsibilities of a caseworker is what helps any agency to uphold
The short documentary “Child of Rage” presents an example of how experiencing abuse as a child can shape the child later in life and how some children can recover. The intrafamilial abuse that Beth experienced as a one year old affected her behavior later in her childhood when she was adopted. Beth was also able to recover from some of the effects of the child abuse she experienced once she was separated from her adoptive family and taken to a special home. Beth experienced intrafamilial abuse at the hands of her biological father after her mother passed away when she was one.
Maltreatment has a severe impact on a child’s current and future functioning and development regarding their emotional, social, cognitive, behavioral, and physical wellbeing.(Frederico 345). Different types of abuse, such as physical, emotional, and sexual have different consequences, but the consequences of all maltreatment, are likely to happen in three stages. Firstly, a child may have an initial reaction such as post-traumatic symptoms, painful emotions, and cognitive distortions. Secondly, children develop coping strategies that are aimed to help increase their safety or reduce their pain. Thirdly, a child 's sense of self-worth is damaged and develop the feeling of shame and hopelessness..
They also assume responsibility for the development, implementation, and management of social services that they provide. The social work profession employs the world with skilled workers that use the tools and resources available to them to advance the lives of others. Individuals in this career field are capable of ethical decision making and are advocates for positive social change for the oppressed
Introduction Work to uplift the society by helping people, their families and communities by correcting their problems and try to work for their betterment. Social work is a profession and people doing social work are skilled professionals with good command on their subject. This practice requires an understanding of human. Social work professionals are found in every facet of our life. Example, education institution, companies, healthcare organisations to name a few.