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Qualitative Social Work
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Storying Career Choice

Employing Narrative Approaches to Better Understand Students' Experience of Choosing Social Work as a Preferred Career

Jo Mensinga

James Cook University, Australia, Jo.Mensinga{at}jcu.edu.au

Narrative methodologies promise an increased understanding of the place career choice holds for those entering the social work profession. However, as a novice researcher the plethora of approaches to be negotiated can be overwhelming. While narrative researchers tend to position their projects according to the perceived purpose and the emergent benefits of the approach, in practice they must also make decisions about whether to understand a narrative as a structural or a representational construct, explore it holistically or categorically, and/or focus on the narrative's content rather than its form. Several researchers using narrative methodologies to explore career/life choice stories provide useful insights into how participants make meaning of and navigate their way through the myriad of personal, social and professional agendas to make their decisions. However for me, Clandinin and Connelly's narrative inquiry approach combined with Riessman's notion of social positioning provided a deeper understanding about the gendered nuances of aspiring social worker's motivation for entering the profession.

Key Words: career choice • gender • meaning making • narrative inquiry • social positioning • social work

Qualitative Social Work, Vol. 8, No. 2, 193-209 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1473325009103375


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