The advantages and benefits of a student mutual-aid group in developing groupwork skills

Authors

  • Olga Molina University of Central Florida
  • George A Jacinto University of Central Florida

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1921/gpwk.v25i1.843

Abstract

There is a growing consensus in the literature that there is a crisis in groupwork education due to the limited internships that offer students the opportunity to practise with groups. In response to this crisis, the authors developed a model for teaching groupwork skills in the classroom using mutual-aid groups. This paper presents a study (n= 192) of social work graduate students who participated in the mutual-aid groups. The findings demonstrate that the majority of the students (90%) rated the mutual-aid groups as an excellent to good method of teaching groupwork skills and group dynamics.

Author Biographies

Olga Molina, University of Central Florida

Associate Professor, School of Social Work

George A Jacinto, University of Central Florida

Associate Professor, School of Social Work

References

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Published

2015-12-06

How to Cite

Molina, O., & Jacinto, G. A. (2015). The advantages and benefits of a student mutual-aid group in developing groupwork skills. Groupwork, 25(1), 78-92. https://doi.org/10.1921/gpwk.v25i1.843

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Section

Articles