Ethics and Ethical Dilemmas
Middle Adulthood
Advocacy and
Social Action
Late Adulthood
Miscellaneous
100

Social workers are expected to abide by these.

What are the NASW Code of Ethics?

100

In middle adulthood, this is clearly established and is often done on a much deeper level.

What is communication?

100

This work is often done on behalf of groups of people who lack resources, skills, and talent to help themselves.

What is cause advocacy?

100

Suicide, Depression, Alcohol, and other drugs.

What are the most common mental illnesses and substance use in late adulthood?

100

A model of advocacy commonly associated with creating change in communities.

What is grassroots?

200

Self-determination, informed consent, conflicts of interest, and sexual relationships fall into this category.

What are Ethical Responsibilities to Clients?

200

In the United States, this affects approximately 20% of people who are poor, uneducated, undereducated, and belonging to a minority group.

What is functional illiteracy?

200

When one group attempts to eradicate other groups through acts of rape, murder, and destruction.

What is ethnic cleansing?

200

1. Influential

2. Supportive

3. Passive

4. Authoritarian

5. Detached

What are the 5 styles of grandparenting?

200
  • Integrity
  • Dignity and worth of a person
  • Competence
  • Social Justice
  • Importance of human relationships
  • Service

What are the core values of a social worker?

300

These two basic theoretical approaches determine the right thing to do in practice situations.

What are ethical absolutism and ethical relativism?

300

1. Uncovering anger

2. Deciding to forgive

3.Working on forgiveness

4. Discovery and release

What are the 4 stages of forgiveness?

300
This group experiences a higher level of violence, discrimination, harassment, and isolation.

What is the LGBTQA+ population?

300
  • Nursing Homes
  • Retirement communities
  • Assisted Living Facilities (ALF)
  • Foster homes
  • Low-income housing

What is continuum care?

300

Corey and Corey (2016) describe this as a state of physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion that results from constant or repeated emotional pressure associated with an intense, long-term involvement with people and is characterized by feelings of helplessness and hopelessness, a negative view of self, and negative attitudes toward work, life, and other people.

What is burnout?

400

Four categories, or levels, of systems that are useful to social workers in conceptualizing person and environment transactions.

What is microsystem, macrosystem, mesosystem, and exosystem?