Teaching Mental Health and Well-Being Online in a Crisis: Fostering Love and Self-compassion in Clinical Social Work Education.

IF 2.7 3区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL WORK Clinical Social Work Journal Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1007/s10615-021-00786-z
Trevor G Gates, Dyann Ross, Bindi Bennett, Kate Jonathan
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has shifted clinical social work (CSW) and mental health education in Australia, and indeed throughout much of the globe, onto online delivery. The disruption caused by COVID-19 presents unexpected challenges in fostering the development of skill sets among social work educators in partnership with students. This article is a reflexive collaborative autoethnography written by four educators of different international and cultural backgrounds at a regional university in Queensland. Our university has experienced a shift from primarily a face-to-face delivery to online delivery due to social distancing. This article is grounded in an ethic of love, a values-based relationship-oriented practice promoting care, collaborative dialogue and solidarity between people, using self-compassion and reflexivity. We explore how COVID-19 has forced the authors to alter their teaching practice, cope with uncertainties, and respond with loving kindness to the shifting needs of students. We draw upon our experiences as educators of diverse cultural, linguistic, gender, and sexualities from Australia, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Nigeria and reflect upon how we have simultaneously turned inward and outward through technology. We draw upon person-centered, narrative, trauma informed and anti-oppressive clinical and educational approaches when exploring self-compassion and loving approaches with the students. We discuss the need for self-compassion and love of others as we respond to the current crisis by modeling self-compassion and love for CSW students who are experiencing crises, including loss of employment, separation from family overseas and interstate, isolation from colleagues and loved ones, and healthcare issues.

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在危机中在线教授心理健康和幸福:在临床社会工作教育中培养爱和自我同情。
冠状病毒(COVID-19)大流行已将澳大利亚乃至全球大部分地区的临床社会工作(CSW)和心理健康教育转移到在线交付上。2019冠状病毒病造成的破坏对与学生合作培养社会工作教育工作者的技能组合提出了意想不到的挑战。这篇文章是由昆士兰一所地方大学的四位具有不同国际和文化背景的教育工作者共同撰写的自省民族志。由于保持社交距离,我们的大学经历了从面对面授课到在线授课的转变。本文以爱的伦理为基础,这是一种以价值观为基础的关系导向的实践,通过自我同情和反思,促进人与人之间的关怀、合作对话和团结。我们探讨了COVID-19如何迫使作者改变他们的教学实践,应对不确定性,并以爱心回应学生不断变化的需求。我们借鉴了来自澳大利亚、美国、英国和尼日利亚的不同文化、语言、性别和性取向的教育者的经验,并反思了我们如何同时通过技术向内和向外转变。我们利用以人为本,叙事,创伤和反压迫的临床和教育方法探索自我同情和爱的方法与学生。我们讨论了自我同情和爱他人的需要,因为我们通过为正在经历危机的CSW学生建立自我同情和爱的模型来应对当前的危机,包括失业,与海外和州际的家人分离,与同事和亲人隔离,以及医疗保健问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
3.60%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Clinical Social Work Journal is an international forum devoted to the advancement of clinical knowledge and acumen of practitioners, educators, researchers, and policymakers. The journal, founded in 1973, publishes leading peer-reviewed original articles germane to contemporary clinical practice with individuals, couples, families, and groups, and welcomes submissions that reflect innovations in theoretical, practice , evidence-based clinical research, and interdisciplinary approaches.
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