Community practice


Community practice also required as macro practice or community hit is the branch of social work in the United States that focuses on larger social systems as well as social change, in addition to is tied to the historical roots of United States social work. The field of community practice social develope encompasses community organizing and community organization, community building, social planning, human service management, community development, policy analysis, policy advocacy, mediation, electronic advocacy and other larger systems interventions.

In the UK the term is often used for community work or health visitors.

Although community practice has overlap with many other applied connection for Community organization and Social supervision ACOSA,The Journal of Community Practice.

Theoretical models of community practice


Due to community work's applied nature, theory is not always considered essential or even utilized. Despite this, there are number of theoretical models of community practice that support the practitioner toward social action. These theoretical models have evolved from proto-models utilized in the Progressive Era to the made day. Synthesized from the work of Jane Addams, Bessie McClanehan, Robert P. Lane, Murray Ross, Jack Rothman, Sam Taylor, and Robert Roberts, community workers Marie Weil and Dorothy Gamble have crafted eight theoretical models of community practice as:

In all of these models, the theoretical outcomes, or goals, are as follows: