Consensus about the value of the strengths perspective is developing among child welfare and family service practitioners. Yet, few first-hand reports are available from the perspectives of family members and interdisciplinary service providers about the principles most important for engaging and supporting family members to achieve needed outcomes. This paper briefly highlights principles most often cited as key to application of the strengths perspective and compares first-hand accounts from family members and service providers. These views were elicited through focus groups facilitated by a community-based family support program.Implications for strengths-based practice with families are discussed
Special Issue Editor Katharine Briar-Lawson and Editor-in-Chief E. Christopher Lloyd introduce the s...
This chapter will enable you to: 1. Understand the key propositions derived by family strengths rese...
Families attending child and adolescent mental health (CAMH) services are often assumed to have prob...
Consensus about the value of the strengths perspective is developing among child welfare and family ...
In times of stress or crisis for families, one effective approach practitioners can use is the conce...
In our society, families take on many different structures. Although they may be formed in different...
This paper on a strengths-based approach (SBA) to practice is based on empirical research with stake...
Family support services, an integral part of many welfare systems across the developed world, have w...
Enhancing and facilitating a strength-based intervention model presents a challenge for practitioner...
This paper asks a relevant question that previous work has not yet answered empirically: what is the...
This work is section in Smith, L and Ford, K, ‘Communication with children, young people and familie...
Social work has a long tradition of advocating for practice from the strengths perspective. However,...
Recent changes in social policy are having a significant impact on the delivery of human services. A...
Although it can be observed that the popularity of a strengths perspective in social work is increas...
Family-centered positive psychology (FCPP) is defined as a framework for working with children and f...
Special Issue Editor Katharine Briar-Lawson and Editor-in-Chief E. Christopher Lloyd introduce the s...
This chapter will enable you to: 1. Understand the key propositions derived by family strengths rese...
Families attending child and adolescent mental health (CAMH) services are often assumed to have prob...
Consensus about the value of the strengths perspective is developing among child welfare and family ...
In times of stress or crisis for families, one effective approach practitioners can use is the conce...
In our society, families take on many different structures. Although they may be formed in different...
This paper on a strengths-based approach (SBA) to practice is based on empirical research with stake...
Family support services, an integral part of many welfare systems across the developed world, have w...
Enhancing and facilitating a strength-based intervention model presents a challenge for practitioner...
This paper asks a relevant question that previous work has not yet answered empirically: what is the...
This work is section in Smith, L and Ford, K, ‘Communication with children, young people and familie...
Social work has a long tradition of advocating for practice from the strengths perspective. However,...
Recent changes in social policy are having a significant impact on the delivery of human services. A...
Although it can be observed that the popularity of a strengths perspective in social work is increas...
Family-centered positive psychology (FCPP) is defined as a framework for working with children and f...
Special Issue Editor Katharine Briar-Lawson and Editor-in-Chief E. Christopher Lloyd introduce the s...
This chapter will enable you to: 1. Understand the key propositions derived by family strengths rese...
Families attending child and adolescent mental health (CAMH) services are often assumed to have prob...