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Article
The Poet/Practitioner: A Paradigm for the Profession
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
  • Rich Furman, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
  • Carol L. Langer, University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire
  • Debra K. Anderson, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Publication Date
2006
Keywords
  • Poet,
  • practitioner,
  • social work,
  • social work practice
Disciplines
Abstract

This article explores a new paradigm or model for the professional social worker: The poet/practitioner. The training and practice of the poet are congruent with many aspects of social work practice. An examination of the practice of the poet, and the congruence of these practices to social work, reveals a paradigm with the capacity to focus social workers on the essential values of our profession. This paradigm, which highlights the humanistic, creative, and socially conscience role of the social work practitioner, may be particularly important today given the medicalization of social problems and the conservitization of society.

Citation Information
Rich Furman, Carol L. Langer and Debra K. Anderson. "The Poet/Practitioner: A Paradigm for the Profession" (2006)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/rich-furman/127/