Faculty-Student Collaboration: Issues and Recommendations
Author(s) -
Angeline Barretta-Herman,
Kendra J. Garrett
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
advances in social work
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2331-4125
pISSN - 1527-8565
DOI - 10.18060/20
Subject(s) - safeguarding , negotiation , workload , social work , medical education , exploratory research , process (computing) , work (physics) , psychology , engineering ethics , public relations , pedagogy , sociology , political science , computer science , engineering , medicine , nursing , mechanical engineering , social science , anthropology , law , operating system
This exploratory qualitative study of 11 social work faculty identified the benefits and risks of faculty-student collaboration. Benefits articulated include helping students learn to write for publication, learning the publication process, getting innovative student material published, and enriching the project through shared problem-solving. The benefits, however, must be weighed against the risks of exploitation of the student collaborator. Successful faculty-student collaboration in this dual relationship demands that faculty take responsibility for safeguarding boundaries, following the NASW Code of Ethics, and openly negotiating roles, tasks, workload, and order of authorship with the student.
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