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Internet technology : an empowering or alienating tool for communication between foster-carers and social workers? Journal

By: Cooper, Neil | Dodsworth, Jane | Young, Julie | Schofield, Gillian | Fleming, Piers | Bailey, SueMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: British Journal of Social Work 2013Description: Journal ArticleISSN: 0045-3102Subject(s): Internet | Social workers | Social work | Foster carers | CommunicationDDC classification: Journals Online access: Open e-book (Ruskin students only) Summary: In an increasingly digital age, expectations of foster carers and social workers to embrace information and communication technologies in order to enhance communication and reduce digital division are also raised. This article reports on the introduction, in three English local authority fostering services, of a purpose- designed internet service, which aims to improve information flow to foster carers, enhance interaction and information exchange between foster carers and social workers, provide a social networking facility for communication between carers within a secure environment and create the potential for new relationships to emerge within a ‘community of fostering practice’. The study explored modes and purposes of communication and the extent to which internet technology has been useful and empowering for foster carers, enhancing their professional status, or conversely has been constraining and excluding. Findings indicate that new forms of information technology and computer-mediated communication are familiar and acceptable to most carers. However more traditional forms of communication remain valued by foster carers and social workers, particularly for some types of communication for which the internet service is considered less appropriate. Whilst information and communication technologies provide an additional dimension to communication and information sharing, it is as a supplement to, rather than a replacement for, existing modes.
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<p>British Journal of Social Work Vol. 43 no. 4 (Jun. 2013), p. 775-795</p> <p>Available in library.&nbsp; See journal shelves.</p> <p>Available online.</p>

In an increasingly digital age, expectations of foster carers and social workers to embrace information and communication technologies in order to enhance communication and reduce digital division are also raised. This article reports on the introduction, in three English local authority fostering services, of a purpose- designed internet service, which aims to improve information flow to foster carers, enhance interaction and information exchange between foster carers and social workers, provide a social networking facility for communication between carers within a secure environment and create the potential for new relationships to emerge within a ‘community of fostering practice’. The study explored modes and purposes of communication and the extent to which internet technology has been useful and empowering for foster carers, enhancing their professional status, or conversely has been constraining and excluding. Findings indicate that new forms of information technology and computer-mediated communication are familiar and acceptable to most carers. However more traditional forms of communication remain valued by foster carers and social workers, particularly for some types of communication for which the internet service is considered less appropriate. Whilst information and communication technologies provide an additional dimension to communication and information sharing, it is as a supplement to, rather than a replacement for, existing modes.

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