Child and Adolescent Psychology for Social Work and Allied Professions: Applied Perspectives
By (Author) Gabriela Misca
By (author) Peter Unwin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
29th July 2020
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
362.7
Paperback
216
Width 155mm, Height 235mm
313g
This essential new textbook meets the challenges faced by those who work with children in order to provide safe and effective practice. It identifies the ways in which social work and psychology need to work together to achieve this. Misca and Unwin reflect on the need for 'research mindedness' in social work education, and offer an invaluable critical analysis of current knowledge of child and adolescent psychology theory and research to help inform best social work practice. Whether a student on a qualifying course or an experienced practitioner, this is essential reading for social workers and psychologists working with children and adolescents.
The authors make a compelling case for the important role that developmental psychology should play in social work if its practitioners are to work well with individual children, adolescents and their parents. The range of theories offered, the examples provided and the guides to further reading studded throughout the text provide excellent support for the argument that relationship-based practices remain the bedrock of sound social work. * Professor David Howe, University of East Anglia, Norwich *
This book is designed to help social workers and social work students use knowledge of psychological principles to inform practice with children and families book is written from the perspective of social work in the UK, although it is largely applicable anywhere. Summing Up: Recommended. Undergraduates. * K. E. Murphy, Choice, Vol. 56 (9) *
Gabriela Misca (PhD, CPsychol, CSci, AFBPsS, FHEA) is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Worcester, UK, and 2015-16 Fulbright Scholar in the USA. The focus of her research is advancing understanding of child development in the context of complex and/or adverse family dynamics and transitions across the lifespan. Peter Unwin, PhD, is a Principal Lecturer at the University of Worcester where he teaches on the MA and BA in Social Work. He is a Registered Social Worker who has worked across all sectors of child care, having a particular interest in foster care.