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Analyzing the Impact of Social Work Education on Students’ Attitudes toward Poverty and Impoverished Persons . Robert D. Weaver, Ph.D. Sung Hyun Yun, Ph.D., MSW May 23, 2008. Literature Review.
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Analyzing the Impact of Social Work Education on Students’ Attitudes toward Poverty and Impoverished Persons Robert D. Weaver, Ph.D. Sung Hyun Yun, Ph.D., MSW May 23, 2008
Literature Review • Several key studies have been conducted on social work students’ attitudes towards poverty, including Rosenthal’s (1993) New York MSW study, Perry’s (2003) California study, Limb & Organista’s (2003) multi-ethnic study, and Krumer-Nevo and Lev-Wiesel’s (2005) BSW study in Israel.
Literature Review • Noteworthy attitudinal studies outside social work include those done with nursing students (Meager-Stewart, Reutter, & Sword, 2004), psychology students (Cozzarelli, Tagler & Wilkinson, 2002), and Sun’s (2001) comparison of social work and non-social work students.
Literature Review • Cross-national comparisons of social work students (Macarov, 1981; Weiss, 2005; Weiss, 2006; Weiss, Gal & Cnaan, 2005; Weiss, Gal, Cnaan & Majlagic, 2002) yield similar findings, though perceptions of poverty vary between and within nations.
Literature Review • Social work curriculum may influence students’ attitude towards poverty and poverty policy (Schwartz & Robinson, 1991; Sun, 2001; Weaver & Nackerud, 2005; Weiss et al., 2005), but more rigourous studies are needed, included those within a Canadian context.
Research Questions Q1: Does level of social work education influence students’ attitude towards poverty? H1: Students who complete an upper level social work course will demonstrate a more structural attitude towards poverty than those who complete a lower level social work course.
Research Questions Q2: Does perception of financial situation influence students’ attitude towards poverty? H2: Students who perceive their financial situation as insecure will demonstrate a more structural attitude towards poverty than those who do not.
Research Questions Q3: Does political affiliation influence students’ attitudes towards poverty? H3: Students who affiliate with the political left will demonstrate a more structural attitude towards poverty than those who do not.
Research Design • Quasi Experimental Design • Comparison Group Pretest Posttest Design • Convenience Sample • Survey Methods
Sample Characteristics (N = 166) Gender Female (84.3%) Male (15.7%) Age Mean (21.79) S.D. (6.31) Ethnicity Aboriginal (.6%) African-Canadian/American (9.1%) Asian (4.2%) Caucasian (73.3%) Other (12.7%) Major Social Work Major (52.5%) Psychology/Sociology/Political Science (31.9%) Other (15.6%)
Sample Characteristics (continued) Social Work Education Lower level Course (74.7%) Upper Level Course (25.3%) Financial Security Secure (78.7%) Insecure (21.3%) Ideological Affiliation Centre/Right (53.0%) Left (13.4%) None/Other (33.5%)
Instrument Attitude about Poverty and Poor People Scale (Atherton et al., 1993) • 37-item Likert Scale • Reliability (Atherton et al., 1993) • Internal Consistency Coefficient (Cronbach’s alpha): .93 • The split-half reliability: .87 • Validity • Construct validity “If poor people worked harder, they could escape poverty”. “Welfare mothers have babies to get more $$”.
Instrument (continued) • Revised Version (Internal Consistency Coefficient) • Pretest: α = .83 • Posttest: α = .92 • Revised Items Food Stamps Welfare benefits
Issues and Perspectives in Social Welfare • Text was “The New Structural Social Work” (Mullaly, 2007) • Examines various ideologies that shape social welfare • Value conflicts and their impact on policy Content includes: • Nature of capitalism (Laissez-faire, Keynesianism, neo-liberal)
Issues and Perspectives Cont’d • Liberalism • Social Democracy • Conservatism • Feminism • Socialism & Marxism • Third way • Structural Social Work (Policy-practice)
Lower Level Courses • Generalist & Specialist Social Work Practice • Social Work History • Ideological Foundations & Values of Social Work • Social Work Roles & Fields of Practice • Client-Social Worker Relationship • Problem Solving in Social Work Practice • Assessment of need • The Strengths Approach • Cultural Competent Practice
Lower Level Courses (continued) • Social Welfare • Income Security • Homelessness • Professionalization of Social Work • Social Work with Children & Youth • Social Work and Health/Women/Aboriginal Peoples
Estimated Marginal Means: Posttest VARIABLE MEAN SE SOCIAL WORK EDUCATION Lower level129.7 1.56 Upper level 136.0 2.35 ________________________________________________________ FINANCIAL SECURITY Secure 130.0 1.45 Insecure 136.0 2.38 ________________________________________________________ IDEOLOGICAL AFFII IATION Centre/Right 130.0 1.80 Left 136.2 2.72 None/other 132.3 2.60 ________________________________________________________
Results: Three-way ANCOVA Source SS df MS_ ______F____ SUMPRETEST 10855.772 1 10855.772 78.091** SWKEDUC 697.418 1 697.418 5.017* FINSECURITY 632.376 1 632.376 4.549* IDEOAFFIL 497.633 2 248.817 1.790 SWK*FS .062 1 .062 .000 SWK*IDEOAFFIL 458.246 2 229.123 1.648 FS*IDEOAFFIL 508.193 2 254.457 1.830 SWK*FS*IDEOAFFIL 17.053 2 8.526 .061 **p < .001 * p < .05 Adj. R2 = .421
IMPLICATIONS • Importance of focusing on structural and global influences and pressures on social policy/programming • Promote more experiential learning regarding poverty and impoverished persons • Create a culture in which research informs teaching and teaching informs research
THANK YOU FOR COMING!! References available upon request. Contact Dr. Robert D. Weaver at: rdweaver@uwindsor.ca or Dr. Sung Hyun Yun at: yshhsy@uwindsor.ca