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Attitudes toward Poverty during Undergraduate Education
62
Citations
17
References
1991
Year
Educational OutcomesSocial WorkersEducationPolitical ConservatismSocial Work PolicySocial Work PracticeSocial StratificationUndergraduate EducationPoverty ReductionSocial WorkSocial Policy ResearchPovertyPoverty AlleviationEducational DisadvantageEconomic InequalityHealth SciencesControl OrientationSocial InequalitySocial ClassHigher EducationPoverty MeasurementSchool Social WorkSocial Work TheorySociologySocial Work ResearchSocial Science EducationSocial Policy
Abstract The commitment of social workers to serving economically disadvantaged clients has been questioned in an era of growing political conservatism. This empirical study examines perceptions of the causes of poverty of three groups of undergraduate social work students. Results confirm that students appear to develop beliefs about poverty that are consistent with desired professional values. Beginning, intermediate, and advanced BSW students rated structural explanations as the most salient and accorded the least importance to factors related to personal client deficiencies. However, a rise in fatalistic interpretations of poverty along with an increasingly external locus of control orientation characterized students who had completed their social welfare policy course. Strategies for enhancing curricula are suggested.
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