Findings From a Longitudinal Qualitative Study of Child Protection Social Workers’ Retention: Job Embeddedness, Professional Confidence and Staying Narratives

Author:

Burns Kenneth1ORCID,Christie Alastair1,O’Sullivan Siobhan1

Affiliation:

1. School of Applied Social Studies and the Institute for Social Science in the 21st Century, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

Abstract

Abstract The retention of social workers in child protection and welfare is an ongoing concern in many countries. While our knowledge based on the turnover of child protection and welfare social workers is growing, much less is known about ‘stayers’—those who undertake this work for over 10+ years. This article draws on the data gathered over a decade in Ireland on these social workers. The article addresses three questions: (i) What can we learn from social workers with 10+ years’ experience of child protection and welfare about their retention? (ii) Does job embeddedness theory help explain their choices to stay? (iii) Does the ‘career preference typology’ (Burns, 2011. British Journal of Social Work, 41(3), pp. 520–38) helps to explain social workers’ retention? The main findings are that if you can retain social workers beyond the 5-year point, their retention narrative intensifies, their embeddedness in the organisation and community strengthens and they have a stronger sense of professional confidence as they move out of the early professional stage. A surprising finding of this study was that nearly all of the social workers in this study had a staying narrative that changed little between their interviews a decade apart.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Health(social science)

Reference30 articles.

1. ‘495 social workers have quit Tusla since 2014’;Baker;The Irish Examiner,2017

2. Career preference, transients and converts: A study of social workers’ retention in child protection and welfare;Burns;British Journal of Social Work,2011

3. Employment mobility or turnover? An analysis of child welfare and protection employee retention;Burns;Children and Youth Services Review,2013

4. What social workers talk about when they talk about child care proceedings in the District Court in Ireland;Burns;Child & Family Social Work,2018

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