Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Empathic Skill: Important To Social Work Practice. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. Skills of a social worker encompass a vast and varied collection of abilities that serve to engage, relieve, understand and respect the client. The extent to which reaching for clients' feelings is the cornerstone of any good social worker is both grand and far-reaching; that empathic skills represent the way in which to achieve this perspective speaks to the need for social workers to be significantly more in tuned with their client's holistic attributes. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCEmpathSkl.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
is the cornerstone of any good social worker is both grand and far-reaching; that empathic skills represent the way in which to achieve this perspective speaks to the need for
social workers to be significantly more in tuned with their clients holistic attributes. Theoretical understanding of this skill in the context of the
interactional approach to social work practice is found in the quest for therapeutic alliance. One of the most challenging aspects of the social worker/client relationship is initially getting the
individual into the office, inasmuch as the engagement process inherently segues into resistance without the empathic benefit of therapeutic alliance. A particularly good example of this resistance to engagement
can be found when clients cancel or completely skip their first meeting because they are wholly unable to bring themselves to address the painful issues surrounding their problems. As
tempted as some social workers might be to concede to the clients repeated cancellations, to do so is to immediately surrender control as the professional and fail to gain the
all-important empathic component of trust; when the quest to establish therapeutic alliance deals with an entire family where several members refuse to attend sessions, too many counselors assume the alienated
attitude of "there are too many motivated families waiting for help; the resistant families will call back when they finally feel the need; there is no need to get involved
in a power struggle" (NIDA, 2004). The relevance of emphatic skill when planning for this initial meeting with the client is to establish
the crucial coming together of social worker and client if the situation is ever to be resolved. One of the primary interceptions of this, however, is when family members
...