Putting the economic back into the social (work curriculum)

Until recently economics and economic theory was regarded as an implicit component of socialwork education. Recent years, however, have hosted a shift in social work education,accompanied by a parallel diminution of economic content within the social work curriculum.This paper considers the repercus...

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Main Authors: Barns, Angela, Preston, Alison
Format: Working Paper
Published: Curtin University of Technology 2003
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25504
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author Barns, Angela
Preston, Alison
author_facet Barns, Angela
Preston, Alison
author_sort Barns, Angela
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Until recently economics and economic theory was regarded as an implicit component of socialwork education. Recent years, however, have hosted a shift in social work education,accompanied by a parallel diminution of economic content within the social work curriculum.This paper considers the repercussions and implications of these educational developments, forsocial work practice and specifically the articulation of social work voices within the public socialpolicy arena. As a means of exploring these themes this paper documents and discusses thedata collected from a survey of fourth year social work students at a Western Australianuniversity. Providing a localized analysis, the survey responses illustrate the degree ofdisconnectedness in student understandings of economic and social phenomenon. Comparativedata from a survey of undergraduate commerce students are similarly employed to highlight thecritical role of social work education in the development of more inclusive social policy.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2003
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-255042017-01-30T12:48:47Z Putting the economic back into the social (work curriculum) Barns, Angela Preston, Alison Until recently economics and economic theory was regarded as an implicit component of socialwork education. Recent years, however, have hosted a shift in social work education,accompanied by a parallel diminution of economic content within the social work curriculum.This paper considers the repercussions and implications of these educational developments, forsocial work practice and specifically the articulation of social work voices within the public socialpolicy arena. As a means of exploring these themes this paper documents and discusses thedata collected from a survey of fourth year social work students at a Western Australianuniversity. Providing a localized analysis, the survey responses illustrate the degree ofdisconnectedness in student understandings of economic and social phenomenon. Comparativedata from a survey of undergraduate commerce students are similarly employed to highlight thecritical role of social work education in the development of more inclusive social policy. 2003 Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25504 Curtin University of Technology fulltext
spellingShingle Barns, Angela
Preston, Alison
Putting the economic back into the social (work curriculum)
title Putting the economic back into the social (work curriculum)
title_full Putting the economic back into the social (work curriculum)
title_fullStr Putting the economic back into the social (work curriculum)
title_full_unstemmed Putting the economic back into the social (work curriculum)
title_short Putting the economic back into the social (work curriculum)
title_sort putting the economic back into the social (work curriculum)
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25504