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Overview
Integrating theory with real-world practice, THE HUMAN SERVICES INTERNSHIP: GETTING THE MOST FROM YOUR EXPERIENCE, 4th Edition helps students make meaningful connections between classroom learning and their own field experiences through ongoing reflection, analysis, and exercises. This workbook-formatted text reviews and updates basic information that is useful to students in human service field programs. An excellent tool for self-assessment and analysis, the text intersperses exercises throughout to engage students in thinking about how the material being discussed relates to their own experiences. A unique six-step model--which students are encouraged to use throughout their field experience--guides students in enhancing self-awareness, integrating the knowledge and values of the profession, recognizing challenging and dissonant situations, decision-making, and follow-through. Chapters on getting started, ethics, cultural diversity, communication, self-care, and other topics help students maximize their learning from experience. Covering information relevant for every stage of an internship, the text helps students analyze different experiences and situations they encounter on a daily basis in their field work. This edition includes new material on macro-practice settings; macro-practice roles related to communication; issues of prejudice, discrimination, and oppression; use of technology in reporting and networking; mindfulness; workplace safety, and many other topics.
- This fourth edition includes new features and information throughout to reflect current scholarship and practice. The text highlights new scholarship from the Association of American Colleges and Universities (AACU) that identifies high quality internships as transformative learning experiences for students, and provides both students and faculty the tools they need to engage in this challenging work successfully.
- Chapter 1, "Getting Started," updates information about the technology involved in developing e-portfolios, includes current research findings about students' emotional responses to beginning an internship, and provides information and resources pertinent to issues involved in paid vs. unpaid internships.
- Chapter 2, "Getting Acquainted," has greatly expanded content related to agency budgets, macro-practice settings, and the international reach of contemporary human service organizations.
- Chapter 3, "Developing Ethical Competence," provides updated frameworks for and perspectives on ethical decision-making and includes current information and research related to the topic.
- Chapter 4, "Learning to Learn from Experience," includes a strong focus on student learning styles, engages students in exploring their own specific learning styles, and discusses how students' learning styles can affect their internship experiences.
- This edition of THE HUMAN SERVICES INTERNSHIP highlights new scholarship from the Association of American Colleges and Universities (AACU) that identifies high quality internships as transformative learning experiences for students, and provides both students and faculty the tools they need to engage in this challenging work successfully.
- Kiser offers a wealth of practical information for students just beginning their field experience, focusing on issues such as myths about internships, stages in the development of internships, development of a learning agreement, and getting to know the field placement agency.
- The book offers solid coverage of the special skills of human service professionals--including those related to supervision, diversity, ethics, communication, oral and written reports, and emotions and stress in the workplace--while helping students understand and avoid common problems interns face.
- Useful for students in all social science disciplines, THE HUMAN SERVICES INTERNSHIP presents a helpful six-step model readers can use during their internship and throughout their careers. This model includes careful observation, identification and application of relevant knowledge, reflection on personal reactions, identification of dissonance, articulating learning from the experience, and planning for the next step in their work and learning.
- Reflections and other writing exercises give instructors the opportunity to provide supportive assistance, corrective feedback, prompts toward further reflection, and other feedback that can enhance students' internship experiences and learning. These writing exercises also help students connect knowledge with their experiences and to apply critical thinking skills in their work. These writing prompts can also be used as springboards for rich in-class discussions.
- "Questions for Further Thought and Discussion," located at the end of each chapter and new to this edition, assist faculty in facilitating group discussions that go beyond the book's writing exercises. Recent scholarship on student learning in internships emphasizes the importance of discussion with peers and faculty. Consistent with this finding, faculty using this text have access to a wealth of ideas for generating meaningful discussions in their classes.
2. Getting Acquainted.
3. Developing Ethical Competence.
4. Learning to Learn from Experience: Learning Styles and the Integrative Processing Model.
5. Using Supervision.
6. Communicating in Your Internship.
7. Developing Cultural Competence.
8. Writing and Reporting within Your Field Agency.
9. Taking Care of Yourself.
10. Ending Your Internship.
11. Planning Your Career.
Appendices.