Communication and interpersonal skills are an essential part of practice. Taking a skills-based approach, this book looks at research, theories, approaches and processes, demonstrating how they relate directly to practice. It will help you to understand the benefits that good communication skills can bring to your work with children and families, adults, groups, and those with communication difficulties.
Juliet Koprowska was a Senior Lecturer Social Work at the University of York until 2018, and then an Honorary Fellow. She is Chair of GAPS (promoting psychodynamic, systemic and relationship-based approaches to social work). She is a registered social worker and a Licensed Systems-Centered® Practitioner. Her most recent research is into talk in social work.
Chapter 1: Communication skills: don′t they just come naturally?Chapter 2: What do we know about effective communication?Chapter 3: The human face of social work: understanding emotion and non-verbal communicationChapter 4: Getting startedChapter 5: Making progress and managing endingsChapter 6: Communicating with familiesChapter 7: Communicating with childrenChapter 8: Working with people with additional communication needs: communicative minoritiesChapter 9: Working with groupsChapter 10: Working with involuntary clientsChapter 11: Safety and risk: working with hostility and deceptionChapter 12: The demands and rewards of interpersonal work