Transcript Slide 1

Self-Protection in Careers Work:
resilience and well-being of
practitioners in the Local
Employment Service
Dr. Lucy Hearne,
University of Limerick
Understanding Professional
Resilience
Conceptual Framework
Professional Resilience
(helping professions)
Critical Pedagogy
(Career Guidance)
10/10/2014
Governmentality
(PES)
Professional Resilience
Unstable construct, varies across lifespan
Involves psychological, behavioural and cognitive functioning and
emotional regulation
Range of personal, relational and organisational settings
(Day & Gu, 2014; Windle, 2011)
Qualities – risk factors, protective factors/developmental assets
Process - coping with adversity, bouncing back
Innate resilience - motivational forces
Ecological – negotiation for resources between individual and
environment
(Flach, 1997 ; Richardson, 2002; Ungar, 2006)
Professional Resilience
Critical and constructionist views – challenge
dominant discourses that narrowly define ‘successful
adaptation’ and ‘challenging circumstances’
Embedded assumption: resiliency is responsibility of
the individual, lack is a form of weakness
(Luther et al, 2000; McLeod, 2007;
Price et al, 2012)
Career Guidance as ‘High-Touch Work’
(Hearne, 2012; Hearne & O’Grady, 2013)
“making a highly skilled professional attachment, involvement and separation
over and over again with one person after another”
(Skovolt and Trotter-Mathison, 2011:106)
Contextual factors:
 streamlining of public services (PES, SOLAS, AEGI, ETB’s)
 economic recession – clients and practitioners'’ anxiety about future
 unemployment rates (13.7% Quarter 1, 2013 – 11. 1 % Quarter 3, 2014 )
 increased volume of clients seeking help;
 culture of accountability, targets, and cost-benefit;
 discourse of client responsibility and surveillance;
 government funding cutbacks and recruitment moratorium;
 disparate perception of ‘guidance’ amongst different stakeholders (public, policymakers, providers)
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‘Criticality’ in Career Guidance
Examination of human interaction and power relations
Considers power, control, equity, social justice, bureaucracy in everyday
life
Critiques dominant technical-rational approach underpinning public
service practices, e.g. career guidance,
(Bimrose & Hearne, 2012; Kincheloe, 2008; Prilleltensky & Stead, 2012)
Intensification of control and casualisation of employment practices
(Douglas, 2011; Price et al, 2012)
Self-regulation and coping expected, despite oppressive structures
(Parker, 1999)
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Governmentality in PES
Governmentality form of disciplinary power where relations have become elaborated,
rationalized, and centralized in the form of, or under the auspices, of state institutions
(Foucault, 1982)
Career guidance - instrument of ‘liberal governmental’ rationality for economic end
(Darmon & Perez, 2011; Hearne, 2009)
Government Technology: dominant frameworks for institutionalization of career and
labour market guidance for employment (Activation) and education (Lifelong Learning)
Tension – ‘humanist’ perspective in helping individual’s development vs. national policy for
economic stability
(Darmon & Perez, 2011)
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Governmentality in PES
• Global move in government rhetoric: from welfare state to workfare state
• Assault on Human Services: bureaucratic control, accountability and fiscal
crisis
• Performance measurements: caseload activity used as a quantitative
measure
• Fiscal crisis: suspension of hiring, increasing penalties to public employees
regardless of implications for clients
• Street level bureaucrats: public servants “who interact directly with
citizens in the execution of their work” (Lipsky, 2010:3), [e.g. career
practitioners]
(Brodkin & Marston, 2014; Lipsky, 2010)
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Implications for PES Practitioners
• Relations with clients – mixture of conflict, reciprocity and control
• Social construction of the client - distribution of benefits and sanctions,
control (standardized ways of processing clients), teaching of the client
role, stigmatization of clients (l/t unemployed, good client, bad client)
• Helping orientation incompatible with judgment and control of clients for
bureaucratic purposes
• Advocacy compromised by large case loads and mass processing of clients
• Despite peer support, work alienation and sense of mistrust in
organisation
(Lipsky, 2010)
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Challenges in Professional Practice
(Hearne, 2012)
1. Volume & diversity of clients
2. Complex client issues
3. Realistic vs. unrealistic expectations of
stakeholders
4. Outcome measurement
Report: https://www2.ul.ie/pdf/232957089.pdf
Professional Resilience
(Hearne, 2012)
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Stress/Burnout symptoms: from empathy erosion to mild depression, anxiety and
weariness, rumination
Prevalence: mixed in cases, cumulative exhaustion - ‘peak’ and ‘trough’ periods
Boundary erosion: bringing work home, inability to say ‘no’
Time squeeze: professional revitalisation and strategic planning difficult
Long-term resilience: concern of stamina, lifestyle, burnout vs. need for new
professional challenges
Subjective Wellbeing:
professional autonomy,
organisational valuing
workload and expectations of stakeholders explicit
self-care practices including professional supervision
Follow-on Study 2013
(Hearne & O’Grady)
An investigation into the professional resilience of career guidance
practitioners in the Local Employment Service (LES) in the Republic of
Ireland
Method: national online survey of LES career practitioners (population circa
300 in 26 services)
Content focus: professional role; LES work practices (caseloads and support),
impact of recession, client issues, emotional well-being, stress and
burnout, professional resiliency and wellbeing, self-regulation, restorative
practices such as supervision & CPD
Fieldwork, Findings & Dissemination: July/August 2013 onwards
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Follow-on Study 2013
(Hearne & O’Grady)
• Sample (n=38): female (n=26) and males (n=12),
• Working full-time (n=28) and part-time (n=6).
• Average age 48, with age range of 29 to 63.
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Length of time in current position - 9 months to 17 years
• Of 36 replies: professional role titles varied:
19 Mediators, 5 Co-ordinators,
5 Guidance Officers/Workers, 3 Adult Guidance Counsellors,
3 Information Officers and 1 Career Guidance Practitioner.
Impact of the Recession
Impact of Policy Measures
Burnout symptoms
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
YES
No
Support in professional role
External professional supervision
Professional boundaries
Work-life Balance
Qualitative Responses
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Rewarding aspect: “meaningful engagement” with clients.
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View themselves as: “change agents
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Process work: erosion with some practitioners “being pulled from all corners”.
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Do not have a high level of autonomy in their work, they experience reasonable
rather than excessive demands from management
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Wellbeing: nutritionally, emotionally and psychologically as much as possible, have
optimistic outlook, and a physically active lifestyle.
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Re-orientation of their work hours to “redress a work-life imbalance to some
extent”.
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Another practitioner has so far “managed to leave the frustrations and feelings of
powerlessness at work behind me when I go home”.
Conclusions of Study
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Most salient client issues: financial concerns, anxiety about future, sense
of hopelessness, poor self confidence, and lack of motivation
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Exponential workload impacting on relational aspect work with clients
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Practitioners are largely supported by their family, friends and LES
colleagues, but largely unsupported by government policy makers
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Most common burnout symptoms: low energy, empathy fatigue,
emotional and mental exhaustion, increased irritability, and extreme
dissatisfaction at work
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Concern: lack of external professional supervision (funding not provided)
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Rely on their own innate self-care strategies to maintain resilience and
wellbeing for their work