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British Journal of Social Work (2002) 32, 589-608
© 2002 British Association of Social Workers

Where Does it Begin? A Comparative Perspective on the Professional Preferences of First-year Social Work Students

Idit Weiss, John Gal, Ram A. Cnaan and Rea Maglajlic

Dr Idit Weiss is a lecturer at the Bob Shapell School of Social Work at Tel Aviv University. E-mail: iditweis{at}post.tau.ac.il

Dr John Gal is a lecturer at the Baerwald School of Social Work at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. E-mail: msjgsw{at}mscc.huji.ac.il

Professor Ram A. Cnaan is an associate professor at the Universityof Pennsylvania School of Social Work.

Rea Maglajlic is a Ph.D. student at the Anglia Polytechnic University, Cambridge, England. E-mail: reima-ana.maglajlic{at}zg.tel.hr

Correspondence to Dr John Gal, Paul Baerwald School of Social Work, The Hebrew University, Mt Scopus, Jerusalem 91905, Israel.

Summary

The goal of this paper is to contribute to a better understanding of international social work by examining the professional preferences of students at the beginning of the social work training process in the United States, Great Britain and Israel. The study, upon which the paper is based, examined the preferences of the students with regard client groups, social services, types of sectors and of practices, and sought to identify the similarities and the differences between these preferences in different countries. The findings indicate that the students from the United States and Israeli universities prefer to work with social groups and to be employed in services, that can be defined as "less stigmatic", while these trends were not identifiable in the case of the British students. They expressed a greater readiness to work with more needy social groups and to find employment in the state sector. By contrast, the students in all the universities studied expressed a similar unwillingness to work the unemployed, the chronically ill and to find employment in old-aged homes. In addition, casework with individuals was the most preferred type of social work practice. Clearly, the findings indicate that the preferences of students in different countries reflect variations in the nature of social work in each of the specific national settings.


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Br J Soc WorkHome page
I. Weiss, J. Gal, and J. Katan
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