Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

Personnel in public institutions and agencies,
574, 578, 583

Pettit, Walter W. (paper), 681

Philadelphia: clinics for Negroes, 228; health
of Negro children, 230; housing for Negroes,
228; expenses for welfare, 523
Philadelphia as a Provider for Dependent
Children, Deardorff, 525

Philosophy of Community Organization, The:
The Rural Community Ideal, Burr, 396
Phoenix, Ariz., study of migrating tubercu-
lous, 192

Picture brides (Japanese), 71

Play: facilities in Chicago, 493; need of, 435,
494, 551

Policeman's power for good in neighborhood,
393

Policy,

America's Present Immigration,
Razovsky, 599

Policy and Personnel in Public Institutions
and Agencies: Kelso, 574; Potter, 578;
Pershing, 583

Politician, professional, what the social work-
er can learn from him, 394

Politics, in community civic problems, 391;
in public social work, 575, 578
Poolrooms in settlements, 155

Popular Presentation of Public Social Work,
Gillin, 565

Population: of Boston, by race and nation-
ality, 484; rate of growth in Louisville, 463
Porter, Rose (paper), 242

Portland, Ore., seasonal employment com-
mission, 263

Potter, Ellen C., M.D. (paper), 578

Poverty: a cause of bad habits of children,

454; elimination of, by consumer's coopera-
tion, 313

Prejudice (see also intolerance), racial and
religious, an approach to understanding, 379
Preschool Child, Health Training of the,
Gruenberg, 221

Present Naturalization Law at Work, The,
Green, 607

Presentation of public social work, 565

Preventive Work with Minors, Gilman, 152
Principles of public presentation of social
work, 560

Prisoner: function of prison with reference
to, 576; psychiatry and the, 548
Private agency (child welfare), interpreted to
community, 132

Private and public agencies, correlation of, 133
Probation, The Relation of, to Other County
Social Work, Gibson, 103

Probation: officers as psychologists, 545;
among immigrants, 595

Problems of a Permanent Child Guidance
Clinic, The, Crutcher, 422

Problems of Naturalization: Green, 607;
Roche, 611

Producers' cooperation the way to industrial
democracy, 316

Profession: definition, 662; is social work a?
629, 696

Professional development of social worker:
responsibility for, 696; organization, objec-
tives of, 636; needs, studies of, 672, 677, 681,
685; requirements in social work, support
and interpretation of, 658, 662, 668
Professional Standards and Education (Div.
XI), 629

Professional Standards in Social Agencies:
Berry, 687; White, 692; Van Waters, 696
Prognostications in the Field of Community
Work, Some, Pettit, 681

Program for county: in child care, 95, 99, 103;
for crippled children, 120; for family service,
how met and supported, 482; for mental
hygiene, 400, 404, 407, 411; for recreation
in Chicago, 493; for social work in cities
and towns, 78

Provincialism, a danger to social workers, 20
Psychiatric social work and a mental hygiene

program, 411; treatment, in reformatory
institution, 548; work for immigrants, 597
Psychiatric Social Work in Relation to a State
Mental Hygiene Program, Lloyd, 411

Psychiatry and the Offender in the Com-
munity: Goldsmith, 543; Whipp, 548;
Meninger, 552

Psychiatry and the Prisoner, Meninger, 552
Psychology: a contribution to social work,
649; and the immigrant offender, 597; and
the juvenile offender, 543

Psychopathic Hospital, Colorado, its social
functions, 407

Psychopathic Hospitals to the Mental Hy-
giene Movement, The Relation of, Orton,
400

Public (see also county, state, federal, gov-
ernment) agency: interpreted to com-
munity, 137; and private relief in Boston,
484; and private work for handicapped, 325;
cost of maintaining good case work, 238,
242; health nursing, 480; institutions and
agencies, policy and personnel in, 574, 578,
583; social work with county as unit, 538;
welfare work, interpretation and support of,
555, 560, 565

Public Officials and Administration (Div. IX),
538

Publications and Uniform Social Data, Lund-
berg, 560

Purchases and contracts under budget system,
559

Quota and visa laws as they affect clients of
social agencies, 599

Racial and Religious Prejudices, A Sane Ap-
proach to an Understanding of, Harris, 379
Racial intolerance, a menace,
18
Railroad management and workers' coopera-
tion, 307

Ratios, social service, how worked out? 515
Ravenel, Mazryck (paper), 167

Razovsky, Cecilia (paper), 579

Reaction on Personality Caused by Physical
Handicap, Lowrey, 434

Recreation, federal appropriations for, 516-23;
program in Chicago, 493

Recruiting of social workers, 640, 656

Red Cross, cooperation in county social work,

ΙΟΙ

Reformatory institutions for juveniles, 548
Rehabilitation, vocational, of handicapped,
325

Relation of Schools of Social Work to Social
Agencies, The, Karpf, 650

Relation of Social Worker to Health Agency:
Ravenel, 167; Kingsley, 170; Foster, 175
Relatives of psychiatric hospital patients:
teaching, 411; interference of, in child train-
ing, 432

Relief, development in recent years justified,
237

Religion (see also church): necessary to all
human activities, 54; of hospital patients,
475
Religion of Human Helpfulness (Conference
sermon), Melish, 52

Religious intolerance, a menace, 18
Reports of state departments for public wel-
fare, 560; public social work should be ade-
quate and frequent, 566, 567
Requirements (see standards)
Resident and non-resident patients in hos-
pitals, 470

Resolved That the Twentieth Amendment to
the Constitution of the United States
Should Be Ratified: Lovejoy 27, 50;
Thomas, 34

Responsibility of a Psychiatric Hospital in
Establishing Clinical Facilities and De-
veloping an Educational Program for the
Community: Orton, 400; Mallory, 404;
Ebaugh, 407; Lloyd, 411

Responsibility of State and Municipal Au-
thorities to the Migrant Consumptive,
Lummis, 194

Reynolds, Bertha C. (paper), 453
Ritter, Halsted (address), 76
Robbins, Jane E., M.D. (paper), 391
Roche, Josephine (paper), 611
Roosevelt, Theodore (quoted), 66
Root, Elihu (quoted), 104

Rotarians in work for crippled children, 570

Rural Community Ideals, Burr, 396
Russia, a danger zone of war, 57

St. Louis, death-rate of Negro children, 227
Salaries of social workers, 15, 240, 580, 640,
641, 659

San Francisco, health and hospital survey,
461-82

Sanitation in schools, 217

Schenectady, cost of health work for school
pupils, 180

School: and delinquency, 435, 440, 543; and
handicapped, 104; and recreational pro-
gram, 503; debates as means of developing
local leadership, 389; Japanese on Pacific
Coast, 74; principal as a social worker, 392;
pupils' health, 216; teachers as barriers to
mental hygiene, 427

School and Social Problems, The (summary of
meeting), Culbert, 130

Schools of Social Work to Social Agencies, The
Relation of, Karpf, 650

Schools for training social workers, 638, 650,
654, 660, 662, 687

Sciences, contribution of social work to, 648
Seasonal workers in agriculture, 339, 347
Seattle, longshore labor, 302

Selekman, Ben M. (paper), 298
Seman, Philip L. (paper), 493

Sex: knowledge, a factor in formation of
habits, 456; problems of adolescent boys,
158; problems of school children, 436
Seybert Institution, work of, described, 534
Shields, Louisa F. (paper), 347

Simplicity and common sense urged in organ-
ization of community program, 450
Smallpox Problem in the West, The: Flickwir,
213; Gloyne, 210; Humphrey, 208
Smith, Carrie Weaver (paper), 108
Smuggling of aliens, 603

Social: agencies, executives of, in interpreta-
tion of professional needs, 658, 662, 668;
agencies and immigrants, 589, 593, 599;
agencies and schools of social work, 650;
agencies, professional standards in, 687, 692,
696; agencies, value of students in training
to, 687; case work's major responsibility,
233; change responsible for crime, 150; con-
ditions as causes of crime, 596; data, uni-
form and publications, 560; group, defini-
tion, 696; justice and social policy, 532;
problems and the school, 130

Social Aspects of the Japanese Problem, Starr,
66

Social Service Exchange, The; Is It a Me-
chanical Overhead or a Case Work Stimu-
lant? Hall, 509

Social Service Ratios: How Have Our Gov-
ernment and Private Agencies Worked Out
Their Relative Responsibilities for Accom-

plishment and Support of Social Work?
Kingsley, 515

Social Welfare and Public Health: Is There a
Conflict between? Ravenel, 167
Social work: and economists, 646; and em-
ployees' representation, 298, 302; and health
work, 167, 171, 175; and the sciences, 648;
and the school in delinquency problems,
438; cooperation of various branches, 90;
cultural values in curriculum, 643; dangers
of depersonalization, 16; definition of, 79;
dramatization of, 135; extent of, 61; family,
for immigrants, 589; fearless criticism nec-
essary, 136; fearless leadership necessary,
136; interrelation of various fields, 84; is it
professional? 629; its place in America to
preserve guaranties of Constitution, 3, 13;
job analysis, 685; necessary for spiritual
existence, 10, 14; newspaper presentation,
505; objectives of professional organization,
636; of the county, 95, 99, 103; opposition
to, from growth of biological sciences, 647;
professional requirements, 658, 662, 668;
program for cities and towns, 78; public,
interpretation and support, 555, 560, 565;
public, policy and personnel, 574, 578, 583;
public, with county as unit, 538; psychiatry
and society, 404, 411; ratios, how worked
out? 515; schools of, 638, 650; spiritual
values of 132; support of, 515

Social Work, The Dynamics of, Nelson, 14
Social Work? What Is, Norton, 3
Social Work Professional? Is, A Re-examina-
tion of the Question, Hodson, 629
Social workers: ages of, 640; American Asso-
ciation of, 635, 637, 662; and institutions,
577; and migratory workers in agriculture,
353; and smallpox control, 215; and the
school, 130; and the support of health
work, 179, 182, 184; and venereal disease
control, 206; as interpreters of professional
standards, 670; creed, 110; development,
responsibility for, 696; dignity of profession,
15, 78; duty toward public agencies, 240;
in danger of provincialism, 19; in psychiatric
work, 402, 404, 451; medical, equipment
needed, 672; need of high caliber, 133; re-
cruiting, 640, 656; relation to health agency,
167, 171, 175; salaries of, 640, 641; sex dis-
crimination, 642; the vanguard of progress,
25; training of (see also Div. IX), 629; turn-
over in jobs, 641; underpaid, 15
Society, psychiatry and social service, 404
Southwest problems of health seekers, 189, 194
Spanish-speaking laborers in beet fields, 341
Spiritual values in social work, 132

Stabilizing Seattle's Longshore Labor, Foisie,
302

Stadium, possibilities of, in recreation pro-
gram, 497

Staff, as interpreters of professional standards,
070; conferences should be frequent, 699

Standards of living raised by cooperative
movement, 314; professional, of social work,
629, 658, 662, 668, 687, 692, 696
Starr, Frederick (address), 66
State (see also government, public, etc.);
board reports, study of, 560; in child care,
99; institution's functions of, 574; mental
hygiene program and psychiatric hospital,
407; responsibility of, to migrant consump-
tive, 194; -wide functions of psychiatric
social work, 411

State and Human Welfare, The, Sweet, 61
State Programs for Crippled Children, How-
ett, 120

Statistical card for case work described, 246
Statistics: dependent children in Phila-
delphia, 526, 530; family service in Boston,
492; federal appropriations for welfare,
516-23; gross revenues of railroads, 309;
health and hospital surveys, 463-82; ju-
venile delinquents, 439; recreation facili-
ties in Chicago, 496, 499, 505; uniformity
needed, 564

Strategy in community, organization, 385
Street, Elwood (paper), 141

Students of social work, 654, 660, 687, 692, 696
Studies of Professional Needs, Recent: Can-
non, 672; Kempshall, 677; Pettit, 681;
Klein, 685

Success, tests of, in work for delinquent chil-
dren, 117

Support and Interpretation of Child Welfare
Work: Barrow, 132; Handley, 137; Street,

141

Support and Interpretation of Professional
Requirements in Social Work: Jackson,
658; Davis, 662; Tousley, 668

Support and Interpretation of Public Welfare
Work: Wallace, 555; Lundberg, 560; Gillin,
565

Support for Health Work, A Means of In-
creasing Popular, Walker, 184

Support for Public Health Work, How the
Social Worker May Help to Secure Ade-
quate, Norton, 182

Support of social work, 515
Surveys, health and hospital, 460
Sweet, William E. (address), 61

Taxation as a source of revenue for health
work, 183

Taxpapers, education of, in social work, 239
Teachers as Barriers to Mental Hygiene,
Truitt, 426

Teachers, handicapped by intolerance, 23
Teaching material in schools of social work,
656
Technique (see also method) and organiza-
tion of child guidance clinics, 415, 418, 422,
425

Tennessee, test of anti-evolution law, 22
Tentative Observations on Basic Training,
Kempshall, 677

Tests for the Evaluation of Case Work
Methods: Blackman, 246; Wheeler, 252
Texas, smallpox problem, 213

Thesis work in training for social service, 696
"Thicket-clearers" in social work, 137, 141
Thomas, Charles S. (address), 34
Thomson School (John Edgar), described, 535
Tobey, James A. (paper), 200
Tousley, Clare M. (paper), 668

Tradition, breaking, in child training, 446
Training (see Div. XI, education, etc.): for
immigrant education work, 618; observa-
tions on, 677; of public health nurses, 177
Training-schools: and social agencies, 650;
for delinquent girls, 108, 118; for recrea-
tional workers, 503; for social workers, 638,
650; to correct undesirable traits of trainees,
700

Transportation Agreement: a remedy for
indiscriminate shipping of paupers, 201;
described, 265

Treatment for offenders rather than punish-
ment, 554

Truancy laws not equivalent of child labor
laws, 29, 30

Truitt, Ralph P., M.D. (paper), 426

Twentieth Amendment (see also child labor):
debate, 27, 34, 50; defeat of, due to in-
tolerance, 21

Tuberculosis, mortality statistics, Louisville,
467

Tuberculous, The Indigent Migratory: Whit-
ney, 189; Lummis, 194; Tobey, 200

Uniformity is stagnation, 49; of data, 560
United States Farm Labor Employment Serv-
ice, 348, 352

Use of Central Clinics for Child Caring
Agencies, The, Walker, 127

Vaccination necessary in control of smallpox,
208, 211, 214

Vaile, Gertrude (paper), 238

Value to the Agency of Students in Training,
The, Berry, 687

Van Waters, Miriam (paper), 117, 435, 696
Venereal Diseases and the Family, Lanza, 204
Visa and Quota Laws as They Affect the
Client of Social Agencies, The, Razovsky,
599

733

Visiting teachers in delinquency problems, 439
Vital statistics, mortality, U.S., 226
Vocational guidance: for adult foreign born,
605; rehabilitation of handicapped, 325
Volstead Act, administration compared with
child labor legislation, 33, 40

Volunteers indispensable to social organiza-
tion, 669

Wage: minimum law for women (D.C.), 63;
not determined by employees' representa-
tion plans, 301; purchasing power of, de-
crease in, 312

Walker, Alice H. (paper),

127
Walker, W. F. (paper), 184

Wallace, Richard W. (paper), 555
Wanderers Goals for, Hill, 264
War, danger zones, 57

War? What Shall We Do about, Eddy, 57
Ward, Lester F. (quoted), 63
Washington, D.C., death-rate of Negro chil-
dren, 227

Washington, Forrester B. (paper), 226
Webster County, Iowa, social service de-
scribed, 538

Welfare, public: interpretation and support,
555, 560, 565; statistics of federal appropria-
tions for, 516-23

Western states: auto-migrant problems, 258;
smallpox problems, 208, 210, 213

What Adequate Health Service Costs, Emer-

son, 179

What Is Social Work? Norton, 3

What Is the Test of Success? Van Waters, 117
What Should a County Program Undertake?
Curry, 95

Wheeler, Mary P. (paper), 252

Whipp, Frank D. (paper), 548
White, Eva W. (paper), 692

White slave traffic among immigrants, 603
Winslow, C. E. A. (quoted), 173
Wisconsin: law for aged poor, 333; training
of public health nurses, 177
Whitney, Jessamine S. (paper), 189
Woman: legal rights as member of family,
291; effect of Cable law upon, 611
Women's clubs in county social work, 106
Wood, Arthur Evans (paper), 643
Work with Children Presenting Special
Physical Problems, Kepecs, 128

Work for Crippled Children in Ohio, Lat-
timer, 570

[graphic]
« AnteriorContinuar »