WEEK 1: Introduction To DIASS: Academic Disciplines Under Social Sciences
WEEK 1: Introduction To DIASS: Academic Disciplines Under Social Sciences
WEEK 1: Introduction To DIASS: Academic Disciplines Under Social Sciences
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
- Public Administration is the field that deals with the implementation of public policies and government
agencies that enact these.
PSYCHOLOGY
- Psychology studies the human mind and human behavior. It examines how people think, act, and
feel, with the end goal of creating intervention programs that would help improve human behavior.
SOCIOLOGY
- It is the systematic study of society and social relations. It seeks to understand individuals relate wit
h one another and how they function in society.
The different interdisciplinary fields of Applied Social Sciences
There are also other Interdisciplinary Fields of social science and theses are:
1. SOCIAL WORKS (as a discipline)
What is the function of Social work?
- Social work is concerned with determining the needs of people in a certain community, linking them
to the appropriate parties who will provide them these needs, and helping them acquire skills to inde
pendently address future problems.
2. COMMUNICATION
It deals with the process of human communication and discusses how messages are interpreted based on t
heir political, cultural, economic and social context.
3. DEVELOPMENTAL STUDIES
Studies that tackles social and economic issues experienced by underdeveloped and developing nations. A
n interesting issue in the discipline is whether a country is a developing or an underdeveloped country.
4. ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING
The process of facilitating decision making to carry out land development with the consideration given to th
e natural environment, social, political, economic and governance factors and provides a holistic framework
to achieve sustainable outcomes. It encourages individuals to make decisions that maintain the balance be
tween human and natural systems. These decisions must be effective, transparent, and equitable.
5. SOCIAL POLICY
Social policy is an inclusive disciplinary, which means to provide solutions to address needs of social life.So
cial policy refers to governmental and legislative efforts to implement changes to benefit society or a particu
lar segment of society and, in this sense, is a social intervention. It is concerned with how societies respon
d to the needs of people, usually focusing on the economy.
6. STATISTICS
Statistics involves the collection, organization, and analysis of numerical data. It has two main objectives:
A. To present information in a convenient, usable, and understandable form;
B. To make inferences or decisions based on data form a small portion or sample of a larger group.
C. It can help describe characteristics of specific elements in the analysis of society, such as population
and economic development.
What are the APPLIED SOCIAL SCIENCES?
The Applied Social Sciences draw heavily from theories of the various social sciences to critically study soc
iety and the relationships among the people within.
1. They equip individuals with the ability to develop practical and effective solutions to societal issu
es and concerns.
2. They develop the individuals’ research skills and give them opportunity to conduct studies on so
cial realities.
3. they prepare people to tackle some of the most crucial and pressing social, economic, political,
and ecological issues of the time.
4. they also prepare students towards becoming effective leaders in society
What are the Three Important Fields of APPLIED SOCIAL?
1. COUNSELING
Counseling Draws heavily from the theories of Psychology and the other behavioral sciences.Counseling s
eeks to improve the client’s mental and well-
being by discussing his or her emotional problems to help him or her come with them.
2. SOCIAL WORK
Social work is a practice-
based profession that seeks to improve the welfare of communities, individuals, families, and other group in
society. It draws heavily from the social and behavioral sciences for its theoretical and knowledge base.
3. COMMUNICATION
Communication involves the sharing symbols to create meaning. The discipline covers a number of topics,
including face-to-face conversations and mass media such as television, radio, newspapers, the internet,
social media, and electronic mail.
GENERALIZATION
Social Sciences are important because they create better institutions and systems that affect people's lives
every day. Thus, social sciences help people understand how to interact with the social world—how to
influence policy, develop networks, increase government accountability, and promote democracy. The most
important branches of Social Science are Anthropology, Economics, Politics, Psychology, Sociology, History,
Law, Linguistics, Archaeology and Geography. It delves deeper into the science of humankind and society
and explores many branches such as Law, Political Science, Psychology, History and more.
The applied social sciences critically analyze society and the relationships among people by drawing from
ideas and theories of social sciences. Three of the well-known applied social sciences are counseling, social
work, and communication. Counseling involves discussing a client’s emotional problems to help him or her
cope with them. Counseling thereby helps improve mental health and maintain well-being. Social Work seeks
to improve the welfare of communities, individuals, families, and other groups in society. Communication
deals with understanding the process of human interaction (communication), which involves the sharing of
symbols that create meaning.
TYPES OF COUNSELING
• DIRECTIVE COUNSELING
• This involves learning about, planning to solve, and motivating a client to act on his or her
problems. It mostly accomplishes the counseling function of advice, but it may also reassure,
communicate, give emotional release, and to a minor extent clarify thinking. In direct
counseling, it is the counselor who does most of the talking.
• The counselor is implicitly superior to the client. He or she is the “boss” or the “supervisor” of
the client who is the “employee”. The client is psychologically dependent on the counselor
whose role as a problem solver may limit the client’s personal growth.
ADVANTAGES OF DIRECTIVE COUNSELING
• Directive counseling is done
• More attention to the clients
• Counselor tries to understand the problem of the client
• Client gets a proper guideline to follow
• The counselor plays an active role
DISADVANTAGES OF DIRECTIVE COUNSELING
• Counselor is authoritarian
• Counselor becomes more confident and may abuse authority
•
NONDIRECTIVE COUNSELING or CLIENT-CENTERED COUNSELING
•
Non directive counseling was developed concurrently by two groups: Elton Mayo, Fritz
Roethlisberger, and others at Western Electric Company and Carl. R. Rogers and his
colleagues.
• The client is psychologically independent as a person, choosing a solution and making a better
choice for his or her future. The counselor, meanwhile, listens to the client in a caring and
supportive manner, and helps him or her discover better courses of actions.
• Counselors follow the iceberg model of counseling, which recognizes that there may be certain
feelings not revealed despite communication with the client. This is why nondirective
counselors encourage their clients to open up more and reveal deeper feelings which may be
necessary in solving their problems.
ADVANTAGEES OF NON- DIRECTIVE COUNSELING
• The counselor does not play authoritarian role
• Non-directive counseling is client centered
• Client can take his or her own decision
• Counselor cannot be overconfident
• Client cannot be dominated
DISADVANTAGES OF NON-DIRECTIVE COUNSELING
• The counselor does not play an active role
• Client faces a pressure that he has to think about his problems and take a decision
• Non directive counseling is indirect approach
• COMMUNITY COUNSELING
• It helps address issues in a local area, such as mental health problems and disaster
rehabilitations. It also entails partnership between community leaders and guidance
counselors or other service institutions. By improving services and increasing the availability
of community help organizations, counselors can quickly address problems that may occur in
communities.
• Community counseling is carried out in various settings such as schools, hospitals, mental
health facilities, private industries and businesses, behavioral health agencies, insurance
companies, and private practice.
ETHICAL DIMENSIONS OF COUNSELING
• INFORMED CONSENT
This means that the counselor has informed the client of what to expect in the counseling process and that
the client has given his or her consent to participate in the process.
• CONFIDENTIALITY
This means that the counselor should not disclose confidential information trusted to him or her by his or her
client. However, it should be made clear that there are limits to absolute confidentiality and these need to be
clarified with the client before counseling.
For instance, the counselor must inform a relevant third party if the client poses a significant risk to his or her
own life. If the client’s counseling is being paid for by a private insurance company, it is likely that the
counselor will have to provide periodic reports to the company.
3. PROTECTION AND DEVELOPMENT
The counselor is expected to protect the welfare of his/her client as well as his or her life. It is a professional
requirement for counselors to have their work supervised. Supervision of counseling work enables the
counselor to offer his or her client a more effective and safer service.
In addition, continuing professional development of counselors is encouraged for their accreditation to be
renewed (Dryden, 2006).
GENRALIZATION:
Counseling aims to help clients improve their mental health and well-being. This is achieved through the
counseling functions such as advice, reassurance, communication, release of emotional tension, clarified
thinking, and reorientation. The important components in counseling are the counselor, the client, and the
working alliance between the two.
The outcome goals of counseling are changes that occur at the end of the counseling sessions. These
include behavioral change, improvement in decision-making and coping skills, changes in beliefs or values,
and relief from emotional distress. Process goals, on the other hand, refer to actions done during counseling
session.
The counseling process has three stages: initial disclosure, in-depth exploration, and commitment to action.
The different types of counseling include: directive counseling, nondirective counseling, and participative
counseling. Counseling has an ethical dimension which focuses on the following considerations: informed
consent, confidentiality, and protection and development.
STRUCTURING
A technique where the counselor informs the client of what to expect from the counseling process. The
counselor suggests how the client may participate and what a counselor will contribute to the conversation.
In structuring, the counselor and the client establish the pattern of how they will work together during the
initial sessions.
The following are the patterns established in structuring the structure of the counseling process:
a. The counselor usually initiates specific discussions about confidentiality,
b. The time frame of counseling sessions,
c. Client and counselor responsibilities, and
d. The possible outcomes of counseling.
Note: At the latter part of the counseling process, the counselor reassures the client of the confidentiality of
the whole process, reaffirms or renegotiates the time frame, and moves counseling to a new stage.
Structuring helps keep the conversation purposeful. When clients lose momentum during counseling, they
need help in maintaining the motivation to work on their concerns to move to a new stage. Therefore, it may
be necessary for the counselor to return to structuring at various times throughout the counseling.
LEADING
This refers to the counselor’s selection of a response that anticipate the client’s readiness to benefit from it
(Robinson 1950). Responses that incorporate elements of confrontation and interpretation may be valid but
nevertheless destructive if introduced before the client is ready to accept and absorb the information they
contain.
QUESTIONING
This helps open up certain aspects of the client’s situation for discussion, clarifies vague or conflicting
comments from the clients, or focuses his/her attention to specific thoughts, feelings, or behavior. It also
helps in acquiring specific information for arriving at a diagnosis, such as learning more about the duration of
one’s depression and the symptoms of the client to acquire the desired information that will help a counselor
device his/her diagnosis and to achieve the objectives of counseling, he/she must have to ask the following
questions:
What are the three Types of Questions?
a. Minimum-led Question. Such as “what happened next?” simply asks the client to continue
with his or her own story.
b. Medium-led Question. Incorporates information that the client has provided and implies that
the information has significance. An example of this is “What meaning did you attach to your
husband’s repeated late nights at the office and occasional failure to come home?”
c. Maximum-led Question. Includes the counselor’s hypothesis, for example, “Did you see how
anger towards your wife when she pressed you to do more was really self-disgusting at your
inability to deliver?”. (Patterson and Welfel 2000).
1. PREVENTION
It refers to the timely intervention of the social worker before various problems emerge.
It involves the provision of financial assistance, as well as services and facilities such as marriage counseling
and well-baby clinics.
2. RESTORATION
Restoration involves the rehabilitation of clients whose functions have been impaired by physical or mental
issues.
3. REMEDIATION
It involves the elimination of existing problems such as drug addiction or substance abuse. To perform these
functions, social workers engage in case work, group work, community organization, social research, and
social action
TWO TYPES OF SERVICE IN SOCIAL WORK
1. DIRECT SERVICES or DIRECT INTERVENTIONS
This is likened to Counseling. Social workers meet face to face intervention with their clients as in a
Counseling Relationship between a social work and a runaway youth. Direct Counseling may take the form
of Clinical Social Work. Clinical Social Work involves applying principles and techniques in addressing
psychosocial problems, including mental and emotional disorders. (According to the National Association of
Social Workers, 1991).
Clinical Social Work is a specialty practice area of social work which focuses on the assessment, diagnosis,
treatment, and prevention of mental illness, emotional, and other behavioral disturbances. Individual, group
and family therapy are common treatment modalities. Clinical Social Work aims to improve interaction among
people, manage life support mechanisms, and deal with conflicts. It addresses the needs of individuals,
couples, families, and groups.
2. INDIRECT SERVICES or INDIRECT PRACTICE
The concept, “indirect practice” refers to the use of policy, advocacy, community and management methods
of social work practice to bring about and manage a more humane and just social order.
In other words, social works acts on behalf of a group to address a specific problem. For example, a social
worker may write to a funding agency and request financial support for the construction of a facility for
runaway youth.
THE THREE LEVELS OF SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE
1. MICRO-LEVEL PRACTICE
Micro level practice focuses on interaction at the most intimate level such as between husband and wife,
parent and children, and among family members. It is often classified as the most common type of practice,
involves working directly with an individual or a family. The terms interpersonal helping, direct practice, and
clinical practice are often used interchangeably with micro-level practice.
2. MACRO-LEVEL PRACTICE
Macro Level Practice involve work with an organization, community, or even society. When engaged in
macro-level practice, the social worker is frequently involved in administrative activities with a social work
agency, fund-raising, testimonial creation for proposed legislation, policy analysis, class advocacy, and social
resource development.
3. MEZZO-LEVEL PRACTICE
The mezzo level falls right in between the macro and micro levels, and involves working with smaller groups
and institutions. It deals with interpersonal relations that are somewhat less intimate than the family but more
personally meaningful than institutional and organizational-level relationships. Examples of these include
relationships among individuals in a self-help or therapy group, peers, at school or work, and neighbors.
The Roles and Functions of Social Workers
1. Human Service Broker
The social worker builds connections between his or her client and organizations that provide access to
necessary resources. The social worker must therefore know their actual needs and where to find the
resources that would respond to these needs. Broker means Negotiators or Business Dealers
2. Teacher
A social worker can be a knowledge provider in many ways. A social worker can educate clients
profound knowledge and skills needed or necessary for preventing problems through empowering solutions,
and enhancing social functioning. The social workers can also be academic instructors teaching social work
courses in institutions, states universities and colleges offering social work degrees.
3. Counselor
Social workers can also function as a counselor in the society. They can also correct clients in some issues
like health or mental problems, relational problems, and most especially situated problems.
To be an effective counselor, a social worker must have an understanding of human behavior and how it can
be affected by the environment. (That is why Psychology and Biology courses are also offered in some
degrees)
4. Case Manager
Case- is an instance of a particular situation
Manager- a person responsible for controlling or administering all or part of a company or similar
organization.
So therefore, a social worker can act as situation controller in the society. Social worker helps clients use
services from various institutions and organizations. This is particularly important to highly-dependent and
vulnerable sectors of population like children, disabled persons, and or even the elderly.
5. Workload Manager
The social worker must balance the needs of his/her clients and the agency he/she works for. Social workers
should always be able to maximize limited resources.
6. Staff Developer
Creator of effective professionals. Social workers can be a staff developer by guiding and helping his clients
use opportunities properly. They serve as mentors or coaches to their clients and even more to their
colleagues in the organization or agency where they belong.
7. Administrator
Peace protectors- Social workers also serve as administrators in both public and private agencies. As
administrators, social workers can implement social policies, programs, and services in their respective
organizations where they belong.
8. Agent of Social Change
United Alliance- the relationship among people. As an agent of social change, the social worker identifies the
community issues and problems, assesses the needs of the community, and finds ways to improve and
provide quality life to people. He/she also works to obtain and sustain resources for the community.
9. Professional
The social worker is expected to engage in competent and ethical practice of his\her profession. Active
membership in local, national, or international associations of social workers is an important part of being a
social work professional.
10. Researcher
Innovators of knowledge- the social workers need to be up-to-date with all the latest trends of knowledge in
his/her discipline and contribute to its scholarly literature. By being active in research, social workers help
contribute to further progress in the field