Forgey Mary Ann, Young Sharon L
Health Soc Work. 2014 Feb;39(1):7-15. doi: 10.1093/hsw/hlu003.
Service members and veterans face a myriad of health, mental health, and social challenges stemming from the combat and operational stressors experienced during deployment and the challenges ofreintegration to civilian life. To intervene effectively with this population, social workers must be knowledgeable about these issues and the cultural context within which they occur. Although schools of social work across the country are developing course work in military social work, little is known about the learning outcomes of these courses. This article describes a military social work course that was developed to increase student preparedness to work with a military or veteran population and the learning outcomes achieved. Using a quasi-experimental pre-post design, this study compared the learning outcomes of students enrolled in the course with a group of students who had not taken the course. To measure this knowledge, the authors developed a 50-item Military Social Work Knowledge Scale for the study. Significant differences between pre- and posttest scores were found for the social work students enrolled in the course. Specific areas of knowledge that increased for the class participants included knowledge about cultural sensitivity to military populations and knowledge about service and advocacy frameworks.
现役军人和退伍军人面临着无数的健康、心理健康和社会挑战,这些挑战源于部署期间经历的战斗和作战压力源以及重新融入平民生活的挑战。为了有效地干预这一人群,社会工作者必须了解这些问题以及问题产生的文化背景。尽管全国各地的社会工作学院都在开发军事社会工作课程,但对于这些课程的学习成果却知之甚少。本文描述了一门军事社会工作课程,该课程旨在提高学生与军人或退伍军人人群合作的准备程度以及所取得的学习成果。本研究采用准实验前后设计,将参加该课程的学生的学习成果与一组未参加该课程的学生进行了比较。为了衡量这种知识,作者为该研究编制了一份包含50个条目的军事社会工作知识量表。参加该课程的社会工作专业学生在测试前和测试后的分数存在显著差异。课程参与者知识增加的具体领域包括对军人人群的文化敏感性知识以及服务和倡导框架知识。