4.4 Reflection
Writing is an integral part of your practice and the documents you write and contribute to can make a big difference to the lives of the people you support. It is through writing that you enact social work. While this section has not specifically addressed social work values, just as in any other aspect of practice, your writing should be based on the core values of social work. The written word is very powerful, and although many people, including service users, may contribute to documents, it will very often be the social worker who has the powerful position of deciding what information to include, what conclusions to draw and recommendations to make. Learning to write professional social work documents is a skill you will continue to develop throughout your career.
Activity 15 Reflecting on your own writing journey
In the final activity, listen again to Vicki talking about her learning journey. This time as you listen, identify three areas of your own writing that you will focus on in your practice.
Transcript: Audio 1 (repeated): Reflecting on professional language
Answer
What you have identified in this activity will be unique to you. Here is an example of someone else’s three areas of their writing practice that they will focus on:
- Notice and change when I am using overly complicated language.
- Write in a child-centred style in documents.
- Use a more active tense instead of relying on long sentences that are in the passive tense.