|
Give social workers the respect they
deserve
By Li
Xing
I first became aware of social
work as a profession more than 10 years ago as I was browsing through
American applications for adoption in China, the Chinese translations of
which my parents helped to proofread.
Each application included a home study, which detailed the life stories
of the applicants from their childhood years to when they were married.
They were conducted and written by an accredited professional social
worker who obviously asked a lot of intimate, and at times difficult,
questions, to make sure the applicants were genuine and capable of
caring for an adopted baby as if it were their own.
Later, I had the chance to visit some shelters for women who had fled
violent and abusive husbands or parents in Canada, and I saw social
workers in action with my own eyes. However, I had little idea how
important the profession was to society at that time.
I was not alone. When I attended workshops to learn how to battle
domestic violence in China or increase awareness of HIV/AIDS a few years
ago, I met only doctors, police, lawyers, civil affairs administrators,
government officials, trade unionists and women’s federation staff. In
my articles, I celebrated the fact that so many people, from so many
agencies or organizations, were contributing their efforts to stop
violence within the home and to lend help to people with HIV/AIDS.
It started to dawn on me only a few years ago that as the economy booms
and society becomes more diverse and sophisticated, China needs
professional social workers to use their knowledge and methodology to
help individuals, families, groups and communities relieve, solve or
prevent social crises through the provision and operation of appropriate
services. As professionals, they also work with individuals or groups to
help them regain confidence and deal with personal and social
difficulties, and to obtain essential resources and services in social
work agencies for welfare, labour protection, disabilities
rehabilitation, health care, youth and corrective services.
The fact is that some universities in China started to offer social work
programmes about a decade ago. However, it wasn’t until three years ago
that Shanghai became the first metropolis in China to officially launch
social work centres with professionals providing a range of services
such as psychological counselling, guidance and help.
Today their number still remains very small, about 453,000 hardly enough
to render adequate professional services to the needy: 22 million
urbanites on welfare and 65 million rural people living in absolute
poverty or on low incomes. There are a further 82 million people with
disabilities, 573,000 orphans and 143 million people over the age of 65
who also need help from the small number of social workers available in
this country.
That is why China has made it a national objective to increase the
number of social workers in the next few years. However, I believe
harder work is needed to raise public awareness of the country’s need
for social workers. Until today, most graduates of social work
programmes shied away from the profession as society did not take it
seriously.
In Shanghai, fewer people registered to take the professional exam for
social workers last year than in 2004. A young social worker in Qingdao
of Shandong Province even had difficulty making the local industrial and
commerce bureau understand what his new agency did despite telling them
he planned to offer youths help to kick or prevent online addiction,
provide assistance to the elderly to adjust to life in the city, or to
workers to adapt to new working environments. The bureau officials did
not even recognize the term “social work,” categorizing the young
professional’s agency as an “information consultancy” instead.
Social workers have yet to win due respect and acknowledgement not only
from the public, but from government agencies.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |