Evaluating in Practice

Regular price €55.99
A01=Ian Shaw
Advocacy Evaluation
assessment frameworks
Author_Ian Shaw
Brain Injury Survivors
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Clinical Practice
Direct Social Work Practice
Emergency Duty Team
Empirical Practice
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evaluating social work interventions
evidence-based intervention
Face To Face
outcome measurement
Practice Texts
practitioner inquiry
Process Researchers
Qualitative Social Work
reflective methodology
research-informed practice
Service User Accounts
Service Users
Single System Designs
Single System Evaluations
Social Work
Social Work Practice
Social Work Research
Social Work Stories
Stanley Witkin
Systematic Self-observation
UK Government Initiative
UK Programme
UK Social Work
Virtual CoP
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780754678588
  • Weight: 362g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jun 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Evaluation is not a self-contained phase of social work practice - one more dimension of the process - but a dimension of every phase. In this fully rewritten and updated second edition of his groundbreaking text Evaluating in Practice, Ian Shaw demonstrates how evaluation and inquiry are just as much practice tasks as planning, intervention and review. By demonstrating that good evaluating in practice helps sustain a commitment to evidence, understanding and justice, Shaw shows that for this to be achieved, evaluating in practice must permeate every aspect of social work. He: 1. Develops a framework for embedding evaluation and inquiry as a dimension of good practice in social work. 2. Demonstrates the central significance of a 'methodological practice' in social work that adapts, infuses, and translates social research methods as a dimension of the different aspects of social work, viz. assessment, planning, intervention, review and outcomes. 3. Facilitates good practice by exemplifying the argument through extensive worked examples and exercises. This book has much to say about the demanding skills that are necessary to achieve this shaping of practice and is a must-read for any social work student or practitioner.
Ian F. Shaw, Professor of Social Work, University of York, UK