QUESTIONS AND VERIFIED ANSWERS |100% CORRECT |
ALREADY GRADED A
Social Welfare Ans✓✓✓an organized system which provides social
services and programs to assist individuals and factors only
Medicine Wheel Ans✓✓✓an ancient symbol that signifies a holistic
method of healing and helping individuals, families,and communities
Inuit Quajimajatuqangit (IQ) Ans✓✓✓The Inuktitut (Inuit language)
term for traditional or Indigenous knowledge of the Inuit
Deserving Poor Ans✓✓✓Individuals in poverty assessed as being poor
through no fault of their own
Undeserving Poor Ans✓✓✓Those assessed to be physically capable of
work in some form or another but are unemployed
Indoor Relief Ans✓✓✓assistance provided in an institutional setting,
such as a poorhouse, almshouse, or workhouse
Outdoor Relief Ans✓✓✓Material assistance given to individuals and
families in their own homes
,Less Eligibility Ans✓✓✓Principle requiring that the standard of living
of an individual receving public assistance or the conditions of work
(e.g. workhouse conditions) had to be less favourable than what a
labourer would receive who worked the lowest-paying labour market job
Social Casework Ans✓✓✓Addressing an issue by systematically
gathering detailed data regarding an individual's environment and
analyzing the data, follow by making a data-based diagnosis and
treatment plan
Social Darwinism Ans✓✓✓as related to poverty, the belief that
indiscriminate relief would weaken a person's moral character,
contributing to the weakening of society and those who were poor were
"unfit" while those who were wealthy were "fit" but possessed higher
moral character
Social Gospel Movement Ans✓✓✓an integrated theological and social
movement centered on social development and change
Family Ethic Ans✓✓✓a perspective that began in the colonial era
defining a woman's role solely as a wife and mother
Welfare State Ans✓✓✓a country in which the government assumes
responsibility for ensuring that it's citizens basic needs are met
, Concept Ans✓✓✓building blocks of theory and tend to have two parts,
a symbol (representing a word or term) and a definition. Concepts also
contain built-in assumptions of the nature of human beings, social
reality, or a particular phenomenon
Purist Approach Ans✓✓✓a practice when a particular theory or
theoretical perspective is regularly drawn upon regardless of the nature
of a client's presenting issues
Eclectic Approach Ans✓✓✓an approach a social worker uses drawing
upon a range of theories and techniques from different theoretical
perspectives not specifically favoring one theory but uses theory flexibly
Ecosystem Theories Ans✓✓✓a way to think about the fundamental
interactions between people and their social and physical environments
Onion-peeling Theories Ans✓✓✓theories that focus on peeling back
the layers of past experiences in order for people can gain insight and
awareness into what prevents them from moving forward in their lives
Faulty-engine theory Ans✓✓✓shift the focus of practice attention not to
the past, but to the here and now. These sets of theories aim to alter fault
or distortd think that impede optimal functioning
Story-telling stories Ans✓✓✓the ways that stories can be reinterpreted
to enable more positive and rewarding life-outcomes. Building on