an organization's map of what is needed to achieve the outcome it desires that is based on literature reviews or theoretical models
What is a Theory of Change?
100
a type of question that allows the interviewee to expound on their idea
What is an open-ended question?
100
a condition when the oppressed view themselves through the lens of their oppressors
What is internalized oppression?
100
what an organization invests in order to initiate a change process (ex. resources)
What is inputs?
200
The discipline and technique of assessing resources and sources of motivation
What is strength-based assessment?
200
a social science activity directed at collecting, analyzing, interpreting or communicating information about the working and effectiveness of social programs
What is program evaluation?
200
an underlying belief that, if not carefully examined, can bias research questions and intervention models
What is an assumption?
200
an concept developed early in the history of social work which distinguishes individuals who are not acceptable to help due to personal failings or membership to an undesirable group
What is undeserving poor?
200
robust use of information and logic in order to create the best pathways to effective solutions
What is planning and policy?
300
a person well-positioned in a community to know about it and its problems who is useful for normative need assessments
What is a key informant?
300
criticized by Max Weber for being "undemocratic" because these types of organizations can fail to provide services to the broadest number of individuals
What is community-based organizations?
300
a statement used at the end of focus groups to help clarify what has been said and move the group to the next topic
What is a summary statement?
300
a lack of participation and influence in the decision-making process that impacts ones life
What is relational oppression?
Marginalization is also acceptable
300
the outcome phase that tend to be over emphasized becasue funders like it, but in reality is much more difficult to prove causality
What is long-term outcomes
400
a geographical depiction of available resources
What is an assets map?
400
an ecological lens to organizations that posits that it is possible to assess the culture, behaviors and problems of organizations similarly to individuals
What is open-systems model?
400
the natural human impulse to "fix" a problem for someone else, rather than trust they can come to a solution on their own
What is the righting-reflex?
400
a theoretical approach that seeks to confront the social, historical and ideological forces and structures that produce and constrain human society
What is critical theory?
400
a type of evaluation that is designed to improve a program by examining the day to day details of how a program runs
What is Process and Implementation evaluation?
500
A model developed in 1979 that helps practitioners assess the different, nested levels of influence that surround an individual, based on observations of the natural world.
What is the ecological model by Bronfenbrenner?
500
a profession that uses social workers training in the analysis of systems, individual interactions and practical understandings of social context and behavior to help improve organizational functioning
What is organizational development?
500
the fundamental skill that makes an excellent researcher AND an effective clinician
What is curiosity?
500
a research technique that, among other purposes, attempts to combat the historical objectification of the bodies of marginalized groups (ex. woman, indigenous people)
What is photovoice?
500
factors that impact the beliefs and readiness of an organization for change
What is content, process, context, individual attributes?