What is Practice Research in Social Work - Definitions, Barriers and Possibilities

Practice is subject to increasing pressure to demonstrate its ability to achieve outcomes required by public policy makers.  As part of this process social work practice has to engage with issues around advancing knowledge-based learning processes in a close collaboration with education and research...

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Main Author: Lars Uggerhøj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Social Work & Society 2011-06-01
Series:Social Work and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/6
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spelling doaj-f47ac1db12234c9ebc840d86b7be916f2021-05-29T05:42:52ZengSocial Work & SocietySocial Work and Society1613-89532011-06-0191What is Practice Research in Social Work - Definitions, Barriers and PossibilitiesLars Uggerhøj0Aalborg UniversityPractice is subject to increasing pressure to demonstrate its ability to achieve outcomes required by public policy makers.  As part of this process social work practice has to engage with issues around advancing knowledge-based learning processes in a close collaboration with education and research based perspectives. This has given rise to approaches seeking to combine research methodology, field research and practical experience. Practice research is connected to both “the science of the concrete” – a field of research oriented towards subjects more than objects and “mode 2 knowledge production” – an application-oriented research where frameworks and findings are discussed by a number of partners. Practice research is defined into two approaches: practice research – collaboration between practice and research – and practitioner research – processes controlled and accomplished by practitioners. The basic stakeholders in practice research are social workers, service users, administrators, management, organisations, politicians and researchers. Accordingly, practice research is necessarily collaborative, involving a meeting point for different views, interests and needs, where complexity and dilemmas are inherent. Instead of attempting to balance or reconcile these differences, it is important to respect the differences if collaboration is to be established. The strength of both practice and research in practice research is to address these difficult challenges. The danger for both fields is to avoid and reject them. https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/6Practice researchPractitioner researchDifferent practice research stakeholdersMode 2 researchScience of the concrete
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lars Uggerhøj
spellingShingle Lars Uggerhøj
What is Practice Research in Social Work - Definitions, Barriers and Possibilities
Social Work and Society
Practice research
Practitioner research
Different practice research stakeholders
Mode 2 research
Science of the concrete
author_facet Lars Uggerhøj
author_sort Lars Uggerhøj
title What is Practice Research in Social Work - Definitions, Barriers and Possibilities
title_short What is Practice Research in Social Work - Definitions, Barriers and Possibilities
title_full What is Practice Research in Social Work - Definitions, Barriers and Possibilities
title_fullStr What is Practice Research in Social Work - Definitions, Barriers and Possibilities
title_full_unstemmed What is Practice Research in Social Work - Definitions, Barriers and Possibilities
title_sort what is practice research in social work - definitions, barriers and possibilities
publisher Social Work & Society
series Social Work and Society
issn 1613-8953
publishDate 2011-06-01
description Practice is subject to increasing pressure to demonstrate its ability to achieve outcomes required by public policy makers.  As part of this process social work practice has to engage with issues around advancing knowledge-based learning processes in a close collaboration with education and research based perspectives. This has given rise to approaches seeking to combine research methodology, field research and practical experience. Practice research is connected to both “the science of the concrete” – a field of research oriented towards subjects more than objects and “mode 2 knowledge production” – an application-oriented research where frameworks and findings are discussed by a number of partners. Practice research is defined into two approaches: practice research – collaboration between practice and research – and practitioner research – processes controlled and accomplished by practitioners. The basic stakeholders in practice research are social workers, service users, administrators, management, organisations, politicians and researchers. Accordingly, practice research is necessarily collaborative, involving a meeting point for different views, interests and needs, where complexity and dilemmas are inherent. Instead of attempting to balance or reconcile these differences, it is important to respect the differences if collaboration is to be established. The strength of both practice and research in practice research is to address these difficult challenges. The danger for both fields is to avoid and reject them.
topic Practice research
Practitioner research
Different practice research stakeholders
Mode 2 research
Science of the concrete
url https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/6
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