Youth worker explained

A Youth worker is a person that works with young people to facilitate their personal, social and educational development through informal education, care (e.g. preventive) or leisure approaches.[1] All types of educative approaches are not ethical for youth work, examples for unethical forms of education are indoctrinating, inculcating, and brainwashing. Youth workers can work in many contexts and according to the roles they are known as enablers, facilitators, emancipators, animators or could be known by the set of activities they use to reach out to youth. The validity of youth work approaches are based on whether they are educational, participative, empowering, promotes equality of opportunities, etc. The basic principles of youth work are respecting young people, providing accessible and value oriented opportunities (genuinely useful) for voluntary participation, accountability, being anti-oppressive (e.g. social model of disability, unconscious bias training) in processes, confidentiality, reliability, trustworthiness, and being ethical in keeping boundaries.[2]

In the UK and elsewhere, the main distinction is usually made between statutory, those who work as part of a government run initiative, and non-statutory, those that work in any other context.

See the article Youth work for a full explanation, and the article History of youth work for a brief time line. In some circumstances, the term should be carefully distinguished from Child and Youth Worker which refers to therapeutic work in the USA and Canada.

Tasks and duties of direct youth work practice

Engaging youth in participation and aiding youth in locating self is an important aspect of youth work practice. A youth worker needs to identify an "opening" for practice and be willing to make that opening into an "opportunity" by find resources to meet the needs of the work through various stakeholders. When the needs are met an "obligation" should be made to delivering the services and enabling participation of youth at a specific level, this obligation then becomes a part of the macro-system of services.[3] Through participation the youth should be able to locate themselves, their strengths and limitations. Through participation the youth would be able to learn the skills, knowledge, attitudes, and values that they have through the relational experience and reflective observation, this leads them to further their growth opportunities.

Main tasks and duties of direct practice's are:[4]

Functions of youth work

Merton, et al. in 2004 through a research report delineated the following as primary functions of youth work.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kate Sapin. Essential Skills for Youth Work Practice. 24 December 2019. 15 January 2013. SAGE Publications. 978-1-4462-7208-4. 12.
  2. Web site: Ethical conduct in youth work. NYA. en-GB. 2019-12-25.
  3. Shier. Harry. 2001. Pathways to participation: openings, opportunities and obligations. Children & Society. en. 15. 2. 107–117. 10.1002/chi.617. 1099-0860. 10197/12051. free.
  4. Book: Kate Sapin. Essential Skills for Youth Work Practice. 24 December 2019. 15 January 2013. SAGE Publications. 978-1-4462-7208-4. 19–20.
  5. Web site: An evaluation of the impact of youth work in England - Social Care Online. www.scie-socialcareonline.org.uk. 2019-12-31.