Foster care is a complex and temporary process, characterized by separation of children/parents as well as continuation of their affective bonds. In this process many actors (children, social workers, families, social and health agencies) are involved, interacting and learning by their explicit/implicit temporalities intertwined with systemic, social and cultural temporal dimensions. Thus, the concept of “rhythm” (Alhadeff-Jones, 2017) could be used to illuminate the coordination of these simultaneous temporalities, including continuities and discontinuities in care trajectories. In Italy, educational research on the temporal dimensions related to foster care has been scarce. My doctoral research will try to fill this gap by investigating how rhythms affect children’s and adults’ learning in the foster care process and how professionals are called to look after them. Complex and systemic methodological design will guide the research. A pilot project was already conducted with 12 foster care professionals, using co-operative inquiry (Heron, 1996) to explore the participant’s representations of foster care. In-depth interviews with other professionals were then used to point to the importance of rhythms. The collected data will be further analyzed by a group of 10 social workers through co-operative inquiry in order to illuminate the presuppositions regarding the temporal dimensions and to critically explore the practices that sustain or hinder rhythms. This research also aims to outline innovative professional training design connecting with time concepts and improving knowledge about foster care. Respect for the families and children’s rhythms is in fact a requirement of any educational practice that should support their learning processes and relationships
Rigamonti, A. (2017). How can we take care of foster children and their families’ rhythms? A co-operative inquiry with social workers and carers. Intervento presentato a: XVII International Congress of AIFREF - Association Internationale de Formation et de Recherche en Education Familiale 18-20 may, Università Karolinum Praga - Repubblica Ceca.
How can we take care of foster children and their families’ rhythms? A co-operative inquiry with social workers and carers
RIGAMONTI, ALESSANDRA
Primo
2017
Abstract
Foster care is a complex and temporary process, characterized by separation of children/parents as well as continuation of their affective bonds. In this process many actors (children, social workers, families, social and health agencies) are involved, interacting and learning by their explicit/implicit temporalities intertwined with systemic, social and cultural temporal dimensions. Thus, the concept of “rhythm” (Alhadeff-Jones, 2017) could be used to illuminate the coordination of these simultaneous temporalities, including continuities and discontinuities in care trajectories. In Italy, educational research on the temporal dimensions related to foster care has been scarce. My doctoral research will try to fill this gap by investigating how rhythms affect children’s and adults’ learning in the foster care process and how professionals are called to look after them. Complex and systemic methodological design will guide the research. A pilot project was already conducted with 12 foster care professionals, using co-operative inquiry (Heron, 1996) to explore the participant’s representations of foster care. In-depth interviews with other professionals were then used to point to the importance of rhythms. The collected data will be further analyzed by a group of 10 social workers through co-operative inquiry in order to illuminate the presuppositions regarding the temporal dimensions and to critically explore the practices that sustain or hinder rhythms. This research also aims to outline innovative professional training design connecting with time concepts and improving knowledge about foster care. Respect for the families and children’s rhythms is in fact a requirement of any educational practice that should support their learning processes and relationshipsI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.