GENERALIST SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE METHOD 1 CH 1-5 QUESTIONS & ANSWERS 100%
CORRECT!!
Macro Social Work - (answer)Is interventions provided on a large scale that affect entire communities
and systems of care.
Micro Social Work - (answer)Is the most common practice, and happens directly with an individual client
or family.
Mezzo Social Work - (answer)Happens on an intermediate scale, involving neighborhoods, institutions or
other smaller groups.
Examples of Macro Social Work - (answer)lobbying to change a health care law, organizing a state-wide
activist group or advocating for large-scale social policy change.
Example of Micro Social Work - (answer)Helping individuals to find appropriate housing, health care and
social services. Family therapy and individual counseling. This may even include military social work,
where the social worker helps military service members cope with the challenges accompanying military
life and access the benefits entitled to them by their service.
Example of Mezzo Social Work - (answer)Include community organizing, management of a social work
organization or focus on institutional or cultural change rather than individual clients.
Generalized Practice Definition #1 - (answer)It can be seen as the ability of a practitioner to work with all
levels of social work clients: individuals, couples, families, groups, organizations, neighborhoods, and
communities.
Generalized Practice Definition #2 - (answer)Having the ability to employ a variety of social work
methods.
Generalized Practitioner - (answer)Can be seen as a person who can make a broad assessment of
individual group, or organizational needs and then make the connection to resources that will meet
these needs (often a function of a case manager).
, GENERALIST SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE METHOD 1 CH 1-5 QUESTIONS & ANSWERS 100%
CORRECT!!
"Strengths Perspective" - (answer)Holds that it makes far more sense to focus on the strengths and
abilities a clients brings to working on a particular life difficulty that to stress the client's deficiencies.
Those working from a strength perspective assume: - (answer)People have untapped, undetermined
reservoirs of mental, physical, emotional, social, and spiritual ability
"Empowerment" - (answer)Generalized practitioner stress clients "unique coping method and adaptive
patterns, mobilizing their actual or potential strengths, emphasizing the role of natural helping
networks, and using environmental resources.
The skills of generalist practice include: - (answer)Assessment, referral work, brokering between clients
and agencies and other sources of help, and evaluation of services in terms of usefulness of clients. They
also must possess communication skills including empathy and an understanding of the needs and
strengths of clients within all the levels of client systems, from micro to macro system.
Assessment - (answer)Is the core of generalist practice. It entails a thorough explanation and analysis of
the client's situation, whether the client/client system is an individual, a family, a group, and
organization, or a community.
Another basic skill in generalist work - (answer)is the ability to refer clients to various resources of help.
This often calls for referrals to other professionals.
Assessment & Referral Work - (answer)Calls for communication skills and the ability to build on client
strengths The ability to listen to clients often needs to be practiced.
Empathic Listening - (answer)Is when you try to hear responses non-judgmentally and to put yourself in
the client's place, whether you are listening to an individual or to a group of people. You will also come
to rely approaches such as asking peon-ended questions and avoiding asking why questions because in
many cases the person may not readily understand the reason behind his or her behavior.
CORRECT!!
Macro Social Work - (answer)Is interventions provided on a large scale that affect entire communities
and systems of care.
Micro Social Work - (answer)Is the most common practice, and happens directly with an individual client
or family.
Mezzo Social Work - (answer)Happens on an intermediate scale, involving neighborhoods, institutions or
other smaller groups.
Examples of Macro Social Work - (answer)lobbying to change a health care law, organizing a state-wide
activist group or advocating for large-scale social policy change.
Example of Micro Social Work - (answer)Helping individuals to find appropriate housing, health care and
social services. Family therapy and individual counseling. This may even include military social work,
where the social worker helps military service members cope with the challenges accompanying military
life and access the benefits entitled to them by their service.
Example of Mezzo Social Work - (answer)Include community organizing, management of a social work
organization or focus on institutional or cultural change rather than individual clients.
Generalized Practice Definition #1 - (answer)It can be seen as the ability of a practitioner to work with all
levels of social work clients: individuals, couples, families, groups, organizations, neighborhoods, and
communities.
Generalized Practice Definition #2 - (answer)Having the ability to employ a variety of social work
methods.
Generalized Practitioner - (answer)Can be seen as a person who can make a broad assessment of
individual group, or organizational needs and then make the connection to resources that will meet
these needs (often a function of a case manager).
, GENERALIST SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE METHOD 1 CH 1-5 QUESTIONS & ANSWERS 100%
CORRECT!!
"Strengths Perspective" - (answer)Holds that it makes far more sense to focus on the strengths and
abilities a clients brings to working on a particular life difficulty that to stress the client's deficiencies.
Those working from a strength perspective assume: - (answer)People have untapped, undetermined
reservoirs of mental, physical, emotional, social, and spiritual ability
"Empowerment" - (answer)Generalized practitioner stress clients "unique coping method and adaptive
patterns, mobilizing their actual or potential strengths, emphasizing the role of natural helping
networks, and using environmental resources.
The skills of generalist practice include: - (answer)Assessment, referral work, brokering between clients
and agencies and other sources of help, and evaluation of services in terms of usefulness of clients. They
also must possess communication skills including empathy and an understanding of the needs and
strengths of clients within all the levels of client systems, from micro to macro system.
Assessment - (answer)Is the core of generalist practice. It entails a thorough explanation and analysis of
the client's situation, whether the client/client system is an individual, a family, a group, and
organization, or a community.
Another basic skill in generalist work - (answer)is the ability to refer clients to various resources of help.
This often calls for referrals to other professionals.
Assessment & Referral Work - (answer)Calls for communication skills and the ability to build on client
strengths The ability to listen to clients often needs to be practiced.
Empathic Listening - (answer)Is when you try to hear responses non-judgmentally and to put yourself in
the client's place, whether you are listening to an individual or to a group of people. You will also come
to rely approaches such as asking peon-ended questions and avoiding asking why questions because in
many cases the person may not readily understand the reason behind his or her behavior.