*This professor is very strict on instructions and the rubric. I have also pick the alternatives and provided some information*
Criteria for Success: Please see the rubric below to evaluate the quality of your efforts and to judge your completed work.
1. Evaluate the following case study:
You are a social worker assigned to a residential facility for youth. You and your supervisor, Julio James, are the only two social workers who work in the unit.
Recently, Julio, who is responsible for evaluating you, supporting any salary increase and/or promotion, has been arriving late for work and missed several meetings with his clients. You’ve covered for him more than a few times. Several times he’s presented dramatic changes in his usual calm and reassuring personality, now arrives to work looking unkept and has suddenly dropped a lot of weight. You suspect his current behaviors may be related to substance use or personal difficulties.
2. In this paper you need to move beyond NASW Code of Ethics, standards 1.0’s into 2.0’s, 3.0’s, 4.0’s, 5.0’s and 6.0’s to demonstrate full consideration of the ethical dilemma(s).
3. Utilize the ethical decision making model as a framework in your analysis; use the required framework below as your outline with attention to bolding the subheadings equal as is laid out below.
Required Format:
Individual Essay #3:
1. Perception of an ethical problem
2. Describe the situation; defining the ethical issues
3. Identifying alternatives (minimum of four individual alternatives)
a. alternative #1
b. alternative #2
c. alternative #3
d. alternative #4
4. Projecting probable consequences (correspond to its alternative)
Correspond with a. alternative
Correspond with b. alternative
Correspond with c. alternative
Correspond with d. alternative
5. Discussion of four areas – you can either discuss each alternative and consequence collectively or individually against each of the areas below (approximately 1 paragraph per area:
Moral rules
Anticipatory self-appraisal
Rehearsal of defenses
Ethical principles and Ethical standards
6. Selecting one of the alternatives
7. A state of resolution