Publication | Closed Access
Social Media and E-professionalism in Child Welfare: Policy and Practice
18
Citations
26
References
2015
Year
Digital SocietyChild WelfarePublic WelfareSocial Work PolicySocial Work PracticeCommunicationChild Welfare PolicySocial MediaSocial Policy ResearchSocial Media PolicyHuman WelfareHealth SciencesSocial PolicyMedia PoliciesSocial ComputingSociologySocial AccessSocial Work ResearchArtsSocial Informatics
The professional child welfare literature offers little guidance to child welfare managers and agency policy makers about the use of social media to search for or communicate with clients. Ethical social media use relies upon e-professionalism, defined as the professional identity established by workers through the way they utilize digital communications. This article offers considerations for standards of e-professionalism in child welfare policy and practice. Specific considerations are outlined for social media policy and practice scenarios are offered, which can be used to prompt agency discussions with child welfare workers.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1