SW Values/Ethics
Perspectives
Advocacy
Pioneers
Policy
100

This NASW value is most directly connected to advocacy work.

What is social justice?

100

Advocating with clients rather than for them reflects this core social work principle.

What is client empowerment?

100

Advocating with clients rather than for them reflects this core social work principle.

What is client empowerment?

100

This movement focused on settlement houses and community reform.

What is the Settlement House Movement?

100

This federal program provides health insurance primarily to individuals age 65 and older.

What is Medicare?

200

The NASW identifies this number of core social work values.

What is six? 

200

PIE stands for this assessment framework.

What is Person-In-Environment?

200

When a social worker helps a client appeal a denied benefit, they are practicing this type of advocacy.

What is case (or micro) advocacy?

200

She wrote Social Diagnosis and formalized casework practice.

Who is Mary Richmond?

200

This 1935 legislation was a response to the elderly losing their retirement during the Great Depression. 

What is Social Security? 

300

This value calls social workers to prioritize helping people in need and addressing social problems.

What is service? 

300

PIE reflects social work’s commitment to understanding individuals within this broader framework.

What is their social environment?

300

When social workers lobby for changes in housing laws, they are engaging in this level of practice.

What is macro advocacy?

300

his organization used “friendly visitors” to investigate and assist poor families.

What is the Charity Organization Society (COS)?

300

Programs require proof of financial need in order to qualify.

What is means testing? 

400

Treating each person in a caring and respectful fashion reflects this value.

What is dignity and worth of the person? 

400

This perspective focuses on clients’ abilities, resources, and resilience rather than deficits.

What is the strengths perspective?

400

This civil rights leader focused on racial justice and women’s rights and led the National Council of Negro Women for decades.

Who is Dorothy Height?

400

This early social reformer believed in living among the poor to better understand and advocate for systemic change.

Who is Jane Addams?

400

A criticism of social welfare policy. 

What is it does not create upward social mobility?
500

This process ensures clients understand services, risks, and their rights before agreeing to treatment.

What is informed consent?

500

Turning “stubborn” into “persistent” is an example of this clinical skill.

What is reframing?

500

A major limitation of the “individual reigns supreme” perspective is that it may overlook this factor influencing people’s lives.

What are structural or systemic barriers?

500

This 19th-century reformer advocated for humane treatment of people with mental illness.

Who is Dorothea Dix?

500

The shift from AFDC to TANF in 1996 emphasized this requirement for recipients.

What is work participation (or work requirements)?

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