Similar trends are occurring in Australian and US social work education, as universities increasingly adopt a rigid market orientation to tertiary education. This marketisation shapes social work education in manifold ways, including the pressure to increase revenues (and effect greater efficiencies) by expanding the size of social work programs. The unregulated growth in social work programs leads to lowered admission standards, as programs are forced to compete for students. An oversupply of social workers will also drive salaries downwards as supply eclipses demand. These issues are examined in the context of a “big” versus a “small” (fewer but more highly trained social workers) model of social work. Emphasis is placed on the lessons th...
Neoliberalism reduces everything, including social work practice and education, to commodities, subj...
Neoliberalism reduces everything, including social work practice and education, to commodities,subje...
Students who have followed routes to Western universities other than the ‘traditional’ one – that is...
The term ‘crossroads ’ is being used in two senses in this paper. The first refers to the Australian...
In this paper we provide a descriptive comparison of the similarities and differences between social...
Today in the United States of America, social work education at the baccalaureate, master’s, and doc...
The educational framework of Australian social work field education has remained static over the pas...
Social Workers in the field are operating under significant stress as workplace ideologies and neo-l...
Field education is a key curriculum component in social work programmes and students identify their ...
Social work education in Australia is responding to the changing social, political and economic cont...
In 2003, the Australian Association of Social Work launched Practice Standards that define minimal e...
Abstract In the face of a rapidly changing world, social work education is undergoing a transformat...
This article explored the development of social work education in Malaysia and Australia focusing on...
This article provides an overview and analysis of social work education and professional standards i...
The social work and welfare profession has experienced change and challenge from a number of sources...
Neoliberalism reduces everything, including social work practice and education, to commodities, subj...
Neoliberalism reduces everything, including social work practice and education, to commodities,subje...
Students who have followed routes to Western universities other than the ‘traditional’ one – that is...
The term ‘crossroads ’ is being used in two senses in this paper. The first refers to the Australian...
In this paper we provide a descriptive comparison of the similarities and differences between social...
Today in the United States of America, social work education at the baccalaureate, master’s, and doc...
The educational framework of Australian social work field education has remained static over the pas...
Social Workers in the field are operating under significant stress as workplace ideologies and neo-l...
Field education is a key curriculum component in social work programmes and students identify their ...
Social work education in Australia is responding to the changing social, political and economic cont...
In 2003, the Australian Association of Social Work launched Practice Standards that define minimal e...
Abstract In the face of a rapidly changing world, social work education is undergoing a transformat...
This article explored the development of social work education in Malaysia and Australia focusing on...
This article provides an overview and analysis of social work education and professional standards i...
The social work and welfare profession has experienced change and challenge from a number of sources...
Neoliberalism reduces everything, including social work practice and education, to commodities, subj...
Neoliberalism reduces everything, including social work practice and education, to commodities,subje...
Students who have followed routes to Western universities other than the ‘traditional’ one – that is...