112 research outputs found

    Imagined, prescribed and actual text trajectories: the ‘problem’ with case notes in contemporary social work

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    Drawing on a text-oriented action research ethnography of the writing practices of UK-based social workers, this paper focuses on a key but problematic aspect of everyday, professional textual practice – the production of “case notes.” Using data drawn from interviews, workshops, texts and observation, the paper locates case notes within social work everyday practice and explores the entextualization of three distinct case notes. The heuristic of imagined, prescribed and actual trajectories is used to track specific instances of entextualization and to illustrate why the production of case notes is a particularly complex activity. A key argument is that in the institutional imaginary, and reflected in the institutionally prescribed trajectory, case notes are construed as a comprehensive record of all actions, events and interactions, prior to and providing warrants for all other documentation. However, they are in actual practice produced as parts of clusters of a range of different text types which, together, provide accounts of, and for, actions and decisions. This finding explains why case notes are often viewed as incomplete and raises fundamental questions about how they should be evaluated. The complexity of case notes as an everyday professional practice is underscored in relation to professional voice, addressivity and textual temporality

    Resistir regĂ­menes de evaluaciĂłn en el estudio del escribir: hacia un imaginario enriquecido

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    Resumen Este artĂ­culo se enfoca en el imaginario (Castoriadis, 1987) predominante en la investigaciĂłn sobre el escribir y se pregunta, en particular, cĂłmo los regĂ­menes de evaluaciĂłn ejercen orientaciones analĂ­ticas sobre este fenĂłmeno. El artĂ­culo retoma algunos extractos de tres proyectos de investigaciĂłn: uno sobre el escribir acadĂ©mico de los estudiantes (Lillis, 2001); otro sobre el escribir de los acadĂ©micos para la publicaciĂłn (Lillis y Curry, 2010) y un Ășltimo sobre el escribir profesional de los asistentes sociales (Lillis, 2017). Los objetivos del artĂ­culo son, primero, ilustrar el enfoque evaluativo-normativo sobre el escribir que se hace evidente en las prĂĄcticas de asunciĂłn en de los regĂ­menes de evaluaciĂłn, por parte del profesor, del evaluador y del inspector. En un segundo momento, argumentar que algunas categorĂ­as analĂ­ticas utilizadas a menudo en la investigaciĂłn sobre el escribir pueden reflejar caracterĂ­sticas de los regĂ­menes de evaluaciĂłn y llevar a un reconocimiento equivocado en lugar de iluminar lo que estĂĄ pasando. Por Ășltimo, el artĂ­culo busca defender el valor de un enfoque de orientaciĂłn etnogrĂĄfico particularmente de un enfoque que resalta trayectorias de textos y personas⎯a la hora de ‘abrir’ los imaginarios de la investigaciĂłn y de hacer visibles dimensiones clave de los fenĂłmenos que estamos explorando. [Resisting Regimes of Evaluation in the Study of Writing: Towards a Richer Imaginary] Abstract This paper puts the spotlight on the dominant ‘imaginary’ (Castoriadis 1987) governing writing research, focusing in particular on the way in which evaluation regimes shape analytic orientations towards writing as a phenomenon. Drawing on data from three different research projects- student writing ( e.g. Lillis 2001), scholars’ writing for publication (e.g. Lillis and Curry 2010) , writing in professional social work (e.g. Lillis, 2017)-the paper has three objectives: 1) to illustrate the normative evaluative approach towards writing evident in practises of uptake within the evaluation regimes, that is by teacher, reviewer, manager/inspector; 2) to signal that some widely used analytic categories/frames used across writing research traditions may mirror features of evaluation regimes and lead to a misrecognition, rather than an illumination of what is going on; 3) to illustrate the value of ethnographically oriented approaches, in particular work which explores writing through a focus on trajectories (of texts and of people) for opening up our research imaginaries and for making visible key dimensions to the phenomena we are exploring
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