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Fathers in child welfare: What do social work textbooks teach our students?
Institution:1. National Innovation Center for Assessment of Basic Education Quality, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, PR China;2. State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, PR China;3. Department of Literacy and Elementary Education, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, USA;1. Westminster University Business School, Marylebone, London W1B 2UW, UK;2. Manchester Business School, Booth Street West, Manchester M15 6PB, UK;3. Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster LA1 4YX, UK;1. Department of Human Development, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, United States;2. Graduate School of Social Work, University of Denver, United States;3. Department of Family Social Science, University of Minnesota, United States;4. First Nations Repatriation Institute, United States
Abstract:Research indicates that fathers in the child welfare system provide benefits to children's well-being and positive development, yet child welfare workers often do not engage fathers in services. Previous studies in Canada and the United Kingdom have found that child welfare training perpetuates negative perceptions of fathers. The current study conducted a content analysis of 217 vignettes in the texts used in required classes for students completing a concentration in child welfare classes in nine schools of social work at the public universities in a Southern U.S. state. Coding was completed independently by three researchers with an inter-rater reliability of 79%. Findings indicated that despite men being the perpetrator in 51% of vignettes, women were portrayed in just over half of vignettes (51%) as the sole caregiver responsible for ensuring the child's safety when the abuse occurred. The data were organized into five themes of how men and women were portrayed in the vignettes: Men as Threat, Men as No Different than Women, Men as Irrelevant, Men as Absent, and Women as Default Clients (the first four suggested by Scourfield (2001), and the last by the researchers). Results indicate that the bias against including fathers in child welfare services reported in other studies seems to start at the beginning of students' learning about child welfare work, in their required textbooks. Recommendations include updating child welfare textbooks to better address the role of men and fathers in children's lives, and increasing professors' and field instructors' awareness of the bias against men and fathers in child welfare.
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