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Articles 7831 - 7860 of 8467
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Transforming The Orientation Of A Health Organization Through Community Involvement, Sharon Pastor Simson, Laura J. Bleiweiss
Transforming The Orientation Of A Health Organization Through Community Involvement, Sharon Pastor Simson, Laura J. Bleiweiss
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Health organizations have been oriented to meeting needs and fulfilling demands which are perceived and defined by physician providers (Freidson, 1970 Stevens, 1971). Organizational goals, services, structures, and processes of operation were formulated in accordance with the interests, values, and concerns of provider-members. Latent to this provider orientation was the assumption that professional members were the ones most qualified to determine what was best for the organization and for its consumers (Freidson 1971). In recent times, however, numerous social changes have occurred on a societal level and within the institution of medicine (Hepner, 1972; Somers, 1971; Rosengren and Lefton, 1969). …
Couple Awareness And Communication, Gary Johnson
Couple Awareness And Communication, Gary Johnson
Honors Theses
Along with many other psychologists and sociologists, I am alarmed by the rapid increase in divorce rates. Toffler, in Future Shock, suggests one result of increasing technology might be the break up of the basic family unit. Gone are the days of the average couple meeting and settling down in the same town they have always lived in, surrounded by a secure and stable milieu. No longer are most women satisfied to take on the role of housewife, accepting their main responsibility as cleaning, cooking, and clothing their families. A marriage in our increasingly changing society is made up of …
Ethics Shock: Technology, Life Styles And Future Practice, Sonia Leib Abels, Paul Abels, Samuel A. Richmond
Ethics Shock: Technology, Life Styles And Future Practice, Sonia Leib Abels, Paul Abels, Samuel A. Richmond
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
During the past ten years a new movement has developed in the United States which has taken as its major emphasis the study of the future. The futureologists led by Kahn, Weiner, and Theobald, have projected a number of alternatives for the United States. The value of this movement has been: 1) to alert the country to the fact that change is occurring at an extremely rapid pace; 2) to provide a transdisciplinary view, not only utilizing projections from various disciplines, but illustrating the multiplier effect that the combination of developments from many disciplines may have on our society; and …
The Myth Of A Population Explosion In America: Implications For The Social Welfare Profession, Lillian T. Cochran, James M. O'Kane
The Myth Of A Population Explosion In America: Implications For The Social Welfare Profession, Lillian T. Cochran, James M. O'Kane
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
In the past decade, the concern over a hypothetical "population explosion" has become an increasing preoccupation in growing segments of the American public. Terms such as "standing-room-only-world," "demographic catastrophe,' "future doomsday," etc. have become common, and the work of organizations such as Planned Parenthood, Zero Population Growth, and countless other agencies has centered around this supposed threat to continued human existence. Paul and Anne Ehrlich have set forth the general position on "overpopulation" stating: "The explosive growth of the human population is the most significant event in the past million millenia. . . . Mankind itself may stand on the …
The Nonprofessional And The Professional Culture: A Dilemma For Social Work, Edward Allan Brawley
The Nonprofessional And The Professional Culture: A Dilemma For Social Work, Edward Allan Brawley
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
A critical shortage of trained social workers, a restructuring of the social services, and a national policy of employing the poor in human service organizations have all led to the introduction of large numbers of minority-group and low-income nonprofessionals into social service employment during the last decade. The social work profession has affirmed the necessity and desirability of this trend, not only as a means of solving the manpower problem but also because these new entrants to the field of social work are indigenous to the client groups which social work seeks to serve and they have attributes and skills …
Conflict And Compromise In Evaluation Research: A Case Study, Joe Hudson, Peter Chommie
Conflict And Compromise In Evaluation Research: A Case Study, Joe Hudson, Peter Chommie
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
As has been pointed out by a host of writers, a crucial issue in conducting evaluative or action type research is the problem of gearing an appropriate research design into the cogs of organizations, ensuring that once initiated the evaluation is in fact conducted according to the original design, and that the results of the study are utilized in policy formulations and ultimately in program development. The focus of this case study is on the major political and administrative problems and processes involved in planning, conducting, and utilizing the findings from a field experiment dealing with the relative effects of …
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 2, No. 2 (Winter 1974)
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 2, No. 2 (Winter 1974)
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Letter to the Editor - pp 109
- A Holistic Perspective on Child Abuse and Its Prevention - David G. Gill - pp 110
- Towards a Radical Reassessment of Social Work Values - Shimon S. Gottschalk - pp 126
- Ethics Shock: Technology, Life Styles and Future Practice - Sonia Leib Abels, Paul Abels, Samuel A. Richmond - pp 140
- The Social-Psychology of Small Groups: Relevancy of Social Work Practice with Groups - Martha E. Gentry - pp 155
- The Myth of a Population Explosion in America: Implications for the Social Welfare Profession - Lillian T. Cochran, James M. …
A Holistic Perspective On Child Abuse And Its Prevention, David G. Gil
A Holistic Perspective On Child Abuse And Its Prevention, David G. Gil
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
In recent decades, child abuse has come to be considered a social problem of significant scope and has, therefore, attracted intense public and scholarly interest. Yet, in spite of efforts by scholars, professionals, government agencies, concerned individuals and organizations, and the media of public communications, misconceptions prevail concerning the nature, sources, and dynamics of this destructive phenomenon and concerning effective approaches to its primary prevention. Such conceptual shortcomings, and a related persistent failure to design effective policies and programs for the primary prevention of child abuse, seem to be due to a number of obstacles.
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 2, No. 2 Supplemental (Winter 1974)
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 2, No. 2 Supplemental (Winter 1974)
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
TABLE OF CONTENTS
VOLUME II - NO. 2 SUPPLEMENT WINTER 1974
Issue Editor: Alan M. Cohen, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada
- Editorial - pp 208
- Change and Program Evaluation in Social Organizations - ALAN M. COHEN - pp 210
- Behavioral Science Influence on Legislation: The Case of Delinquency Prevention - ALBERT S. ALISSI - pp 227
- The Demonstration Project as a Research and Change Strategy - LEONARD RUTMAN - pp 259
- The Three Evaluations of Social Welfare Programs - DEAN HARPER, HAROUTUM M. BABIGIAN - pp 271
- Evaluation Research and Evaluation: Scientific Social Reform Movement and Ideology - …
Toward A Radical Reassessment Of Social Work Values, Shimon S. Gottschalk
Toward A Radical Reassessment Of Social Work Values, Shimon S. Gottschalk
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Social Work's inherited statements of core values are excessively individualistic and politically conservative, posing a false dichotomy of individual versus society. "Maximizing individual opportunities for self expression", is criticized as an outdated, if not dangerous value stance. An alternative position Is suggested which sets as the valued aim of all social work practice the enhancement within and among individuals and society of the capacity for sharing and reciprocity. The promotion of a just society and of individual well being are viewed as being inextricably intertwined.
The Social Psychology Of Small Groups: Relevancy Of Social Work Practice With Groups, Martha E. Gentry
The Social Psychology Of Small Groups: Relevancy Of Social Work Practice With Groups, Martha E. Gentry
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Inclusion from the social sciences to broaden the knowledge base of social work is an accepted fact. In the professions' experience with group practice such reliance is not new, and extends at least to the efforts of Coyle who saw the usefulness of the small group field in social psychology as early as 1930. More recently, Hartford's book provides a text which bridges small group theory and social work practice with groups. An examination of diverse conceptualizations of group practice reveals differential reliance upon small group findings.
As the small group is increasingly chosen as the context and means for …
Change And Program Evaluation In Social Organization, Alan M. Cohen
Change And Program Evaluation In Social Organization, Alan M. Cohen
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
There is an assumption of an inherent rationality in linking information on program effectiveness to program change. This article briefly discusses three typical evaluation studies and demonstration projects that fail to link information generated on the effectiveness of what people do, to program changes. Perceived inaccuracy of the information and the perceived threat of the information are emphasized as two reasons for this failure of program information to affect change in social organizations. A pre-planning functional information base is proposed as an important prerequisite in the sequence of creating a more receptive environment for organizational change.
It is often assumed …
Behavioral Science Influences On Legislation: The Case Of Delinquency Prevention, Albert S. Alissi
Behavioral Science Influences On Legislation: The Case Of Delinquency Prevention, Albert S. Alissi
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Excerpt from the full-text article:
This paper will discuss some of the issues and problems which arise in the field of delinquency prevention where there is over-riding public interest and concern and calls for action to prevent delinquency, but where the problem is elusive and where the variables are not easily isolated and controlled through experimental procedures. What, in fact, constitutes the body of knowledge in the field? What uses can be made of behavioral science materials where there has been little or no experimental successes, or data upon which to build action programs? What credence should be given to …
The Demonstration Project As A Research & Change Strategy, Leonard Rutman
The Demonstration Project As A Research & Change Strategy, Leonard Rutman
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
The demonstration project is becoming a major instrument for social planning. In sponsoring demonstration projects the overall goal is for small scale "pilot" programs which include some form of research to contribute to program change and policy-making (14, 16, 19, 21). It is generally expected that the lessons learned from demonstrations, through the rigours of scientific research, will somehow result in large scale adoption and major shifts in aims, styles and resources, and effectiveness of social service programs. Models or prototypes for future operational programs are tested to determine their effectiveness in meeting states objectives. For this reason, they are …
Anti-Poverty Policies And Evaluation: A Critique Of The Pluralist Conception Of Politics And Evaluation, Robert D. Herman
Anti-Poverty Policies And Evaluation: A Critique Of The Pluralist Conception Of Politics And Evaluation, Robert D. Herman
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Excerpt from the full-text article:
The beginnings of U.S. federal evaluation research can, in descriptive historical terms, be located in McNamara's Department of Defense and the later requirement that all federal government agencies adopt a Planning, Programming, Budgeting System. While the formal PPB system was discontinued in 1971, the analytical or policy evaluation activities it required, still live on, especially in agencies dealing with human resource development and/or social welfare programs (Schick, 1973, Wholey, et al, 1970). Given the recent advocacy of increasing and improving federal evaluation efforts, I think it important to examine some of the assumptions and consequences …
A Multiple Regression Approach To Affective Sensitivity In Counselor Trainees, Norman R. Sharp
A Multiple Regression Approach To Affective Sensitivity In Counselor Trainees, Norman R. Sharp
Dissertations
No abstract provided.
Prediction Of Turnover In A St. Louis Bank By Use Of A Weighted Application Blank, Soon Meng Tow
Prediction Of Turnover In A St. Louis Bank By Use Of A Weighted Application Blank, Soon Meng Tow
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
An Analysis Of Power And Influence Patterns On The Michigan Supreme Court 1968-1973, Thomas R. Radecki
An Analysis Of Power And Influence Patterns On The Michigan Supreme Court 1968-1973, Thomas R. Radecki
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
An Application Of The Species-Specific Defense Reaction Hypothesis, Michael R. Petersen
An Application Of The Species-Specific Defense Reaction Hypothesis, Michael R. Petersen
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
Feeling Good And Helping: Really?, Gregory A. Blevins
Feeling Good And Helping: Really?, Gregory A. Blevins
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
Influence Of Business Faculty Upon Students’ Attitudes: A Partial Replication Of Edgar Schein’S Study Of Attitude Change During Management Education, Robert Eugene Ashenhurst
Influence Of Business Faculty Upon Students’ Attitudes: A Partial Replication Of Edgar Schein’S Study Of Attitude Change During Management Education, Robert Eugene Ashenhurst
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
Temporal Patterning In Adjusting Avoidance, Bruce Edward Hamilton
Temporal Patterning In Adjusting Avoidance, Bruce Edward Hamilton
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
Modernization In Micronesia: Acculturation, Colonialism And Culture Change, Kirk L. Gray
Modernization In Micronesia: Acculturation, Colonialism And Culture Change, Kirk L. Gray
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
An Approach To A Kalamazoo Metropolitan Data Bank And Information System, Alan Benjamin Le Coff
An Approach To A Kalamazoo Metropolitan Data Bank And Information System, Alan Benjamin Le Coff
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
The Informant Volume Vii, Number 1, Western Michigan University
The Informant Volume Vii, Number 1, Western Michigan University
Informant (1968-1981)
Volume VII, Number 1
Fall 1974
- Nine Tenses in Kikamba
- Faculty News
- Graduate Majors and Alumni
- Undergraduate Students and Alumni
- New Undergraduate Majors and Minors
- Some Gold Records
- Critical Language Courses
- Consulting Committee
- Microfiche
- Some Good News and Some Bad News
- Call for Papers
- Course Offerings for Winter 1975
- Course Offerings for Spring 1975
- Course Offerings for Summer 1975
Social Work, Sociology, And Social Diagnosis, Harris Chaiklin
Social Work, Sociology, And Social Diagnosis, Harris Chaiklin
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Excerpt from the full-text article:
A new type of scholar-practitioner is needed; one who can contribute to both sociology and social work. To this point sociology has had the advantage because it has more of the needed people than social work; it just won't let them out of the closet. Social work has always been better than its own self-image. Lack of scholarship has hindered organizing and presenting the hard won knowledge which the field has acquired. The way to bring this scattered information together is by developing typologies which are refined in practice and common to both fields. Only …
Horatio Alger: The Persistence Of A Ghetto Social Welfare Institution, Carol Poll, John M. Goering
Horatio Alger: The Persistence Of A Ghetto Social Welfare Institution, Carol Poll, John M. Goering
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Despite the riots, radical movements and demands for community controls of the 1960's, social scientists and social workers have noted the perserverance of many non-radical, traditional institutions in ghetto neighborhoods. Some of these institutions, like settlement houses, still advance the ideas of hard work, hoensty, competition, and individual achievement which are at the heart of the American dream. These institutions were often around long before the War on Poverty and appear likely to last long after its end. They, therefore, seem to be a reliable potential source of aid for many ghetto residents. The question at the heart of this …
Opinions And Expectations Of Nursing Home Administrators, Jordan I. Kosberg
Opinions And Expectations Of Nursing Home Administrators, Jordan I. Kosberg
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
From a comparative analysis of 214 nursing homes in the Chicago area, it was found that the nursing home field is composed of institutions with great variations in treatment resources available to the residents (Kosberg and Tobin, 1972). While the determination of organizational correlates to the extent of treatment resources was the major objective of the study, an exploration of the attitudes of a sample of nursing home administrators was undertaken in an effort to learn of possible relationships between attitudes and the characteristics of facilities.
There is a commonly-held assumption that not only the academic background of an administrator …
The Sociology Of The Inner City--*Functionality For Practice, Ivor J. Echols
The Sociology Of The Inner City--*Functionality For Practice, Ivor J. Echols
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Many aspects of the future seem imponderable, in the sense that they are impossible of reckoning, and into this category falls the plight of cities. That portion of the cities which is marked by physical blight, continuing property and human deterioration, and myriads of problems of survival-the so-called "inner city" is even more elusive of future prediction and remedy. Theoretician and practitioner alike appear to be enmeshed in an endless web of conceptual gossamer, and palliative ministrations to a relative few targets within their purview.
The intent of this paper, however, is not to castigate but rather to challenge the …
Responses To Social Services Among The Urban Unemployed, William W. Philliber
Responses To Social Services Among The Urban Unemployed, William W. Philliber
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
In an urban environment the individual is unable to function independent of other people. To fill even basic needs for food, shelter, and clothing, he must successfully become a part of the social system. To assist people in obtaining these, programs have developed in the areas of employment, housing, health, and welfare as well as other areas related to man's life in Ln urbah environment. The provision of these programs does not automatically insure that needs will be met. The individual still must make a positive response before a service can be delivered. A review of the literature shows that …