Professional Social Work
Between Theory, Human Encounter, and Practical Judgment
There are professions where the distance between theory and practice appears relatively clear. An engineer can calculate a bridge before it is built. A physician can rely on laboratory tests and medical procedures. But social work exists in a different landscape. Here, one encounters people living in the midst of life’s uncertainty, conflicts, vulnerability, and hope. Simple answers are rare. The social worker must constantly move between knowledge and uncertainty, between rules and judgment, between systems and human beings.
Perhaps this is why social work has so often been described as both a discipline, a practice, and an art of helping.
The first time I taught social work theory, I noticed how many students experienced theories as abstract and distant. Many wanted concrete answers: What should I do? How should I help? Yet quite quickly, most discovered that social work is not primarily about learning one correct method. It is about learning to understand people and situations in several ways at the same time.
For if we only see one side of a person’s life, we also risk overlooking what matters most.
David Howe writes that theory in social work cannot be separated from practice. This is an important insight. Even when social workers claim to work “simply from experience” or “common sense,” hidden assumptions about human beings, society, and problems always exist in the background. We never act entirely without theory.
And perhaps this is the first professional realization in social work:
The way we understand a human being shapes the way we meet them.
Social Work as Human Encounter
For decades, researchers have asked clients what they actually experience as helpful in encounters with social workers. The answers are often remarkably simple.
Clients do not appreciate social workers who seem cold, distant, or mechanical. They react negatively to professionals who appear unclear, unavailable, or who hide their intentions. By contrast, they value warmth, honesty, clarity, and presence.
At first glance, this may seem self-evident. Yet it is easy to forget in modern welfare systems where documentation, procedures, and efficiency increasingly dominate.
Professional social work is therefore not only about mastering rules and methods. It is also about relational competence.
People seeking help often live in situations marked by shame, fear, or powerlessness. Many have previous experiences of not being understood. Some have lived with failure for a long time. Others have lost trust in systems and professions altogether.
In such encounters, the social worker’s way of being matters greatly.
A glance.
A voice.
An explanation given with respect.
The ability to remain present in another person’s pain without withdrawing.
These are not “soft additions” to professional competence. They are part of professionalism itself.
The Importance of Theory
Yet warmth alone is not enough. Social work cannot rest solely on good intentions.
David Howe emphasizes that poorly articulated theory often leads to poor practice. If the social worker does not understand what is happening, it also becomes difficult to know what ought to be done.
Theory helps us create order within complexity.
A theory may be described as a set of concepts and assumptions that makes it possible to describe, explain, predict, and influence phenomena. Theories therefore function as maps. They help us orient ourselves in difficult terrain.
But the map is never the terrain itself.
This is an important reminder in social work. Theories can open understanding, but they can also close it when applied rigidly or mechanically.
A social worker who sees a child only through a diagnosis risks overlooking the child’s experiences, relationships, and life story. A social worker who focuses solely on individual choices may overlook poverty, power relations, or social inequality.
This is why social work needs multiple perspectives at once.
Social Work as a Multi-Paradigmatic Discipline
The concept of a paradigm became widely known through the philosophy of science of Thomas Kuhn and refers to an overarching framework or a fundamental way of understanding the world. A paradigm consists of assumptions, values, theories, methods, and views of human beings that together shape how a discipline perceives reality and what is considered valid knowledge.
In social work, there is not just one paradigm. On the contrary, the field has developed through encounters between several different scientific and philosophical traditions. Some theories are grounded in a natural scientific ideal, seeking explanation, assessment, and measurable results. Others are rooted in humanistic and interpretive traditions where understanding, meaning, and subjective experience stand at the center. In addition, critical and socially oriented perspectives draw attention to power, inequality, and social structures.
This makes social work a multi-paradigmatic discipline.
Social workers therefore operate within a landscape where different understandings of human beings and society coexist side by side. Some perspectives attempt to explain why problems arise within the individual, while others focus on relationships, culture, economics, or social structures. Certain theories seek stability and adaptation, while others aim for social change and critical consciousness.
This diversity may feel demanding for students and practitioners alike. Yet perhaps this is precisely what gives social work its distinctive strength. Human problems are rarely unambiguous, and therefore social work requires multiple ways of understanding reality.
Professional social work is thus not about finding one theory that explains everything. Rather, it is about developing the ability to move between different perspectives, question one’s own assumptions, and attempt to see both the individual and society at the same time.
Perhaps this is where social work differs from many other professions:
Not because the field has fewer answers, but because it must live with several understandings simultaneously.
Objectivity and Subjectivity
One of the most fundamental discussions in social work concerns how we understand reality itself.
The objective approach argues that social problems exist as facts independent of individual perceptions. Society can be studied scientifically, much as Émile Durkheim studied suicide as a social phenomenon.
The subjective approach, by contrast, emphasizes meaning, experience, and interpretation. Here, reality is understood as something human beings create through interaction.
In practice, social work needs both perspectives.
A child may live in objectively difficult circumstances shaped by violence or neglect. At the same time, the social worker must attempt to understand how the child experiences the situation.
A person may be unemployed because of structural conditions within society. Yet unemployment will also carry personal meaning connected to identity, shame, or hope.
Professional social work therefore requires both analysis and empathy.
Order and Conflict
Another fundamental question concerns how society itself is understood.
Some theories emphasize order, stability, and social integration. Others focus on conflict, power, and oppression.
Systems theory and functionalist perspectives often attempt to understand how individuals and institutions can function better together. Here, the social worker frequently becomes a kind of “fixer” seeking to repair problems and restore balance.
Radical theories, on the other hand, direct attention toward inequality, power, and social structures. In this perspective, social work also becomes a political project.
This tension still exists within contemporary social work.
Is the social worker’s task to help people adapt to society?
Or is the task also to challenge social conditions that create suffering?
Perhaps social work must live within this tension without attempting to remove it completely.
Professional Judgment and Practical Wisdom
In social work, there are rarely ready-made answers.
Two families may appear to have similar problems yet require entirely different forms of help. This is why professional judgment is essential.
Aristotle used the concept of phronesis — practical wisdom — to describe the human capacity to act well in concrete situations. This involves not only technical knowledge, but also judgment.
Perhaps social work is precisely such a field of practice.
The professional social worker must be able to relate to laws, research, and procedures. Yet at the same time, he or she must read situations, understand relationships, and determine what is right here and now.
This makes social work demanding.
But perhaps this is also what makes the field deeply human.
When Theories Become Alive
It is easy to think that theories exist only in books and lectures. Yet theories also live within practice itself.
They live in the way we speak about people.
In the way we define problems.
In the way we understand responsibility, guilt, and help.
A child may be described as “acting out.” But the child may also be understood as frightened, wounded, or unsafe.
A young person may be labeled “resistant.” But perhaps the young person is actually trying to protect their own dignity.
Theories therefore shape not only how we analyze problems. They also shape how people are encountered.
This gives social work a profound ethical responsibility.
Professional Social Work as Work of Hope
Many who work in social work encounter people in the most difficult moments of life. One encounters addiction, violence, loneliness, psychological pain, and hopelessness. Over time, this can also affect the helper.
This is why social workers need not only methods, but also reflection.
They need places where experiences can be thought through. Places where one can question one’s own reactions, one’s own power, and one’s own understanding.
Perhaps this is one reason why social work can never be reduced to technique alone.
For behind every theory lies a view of human beings.
And behind every method lies the question of how we wish to encounter other people.
Professional social work perhaps does not begin primarily in manuals.
Perhaps it begins in the quiet realization that human beings can never fully be reduced to diagnoses, categories, or cases.
And perhaps this is precisely why social work still requires theory, judgment, and human presence.
For helping another person is not only about solving a problem.
It is also about encountering a life.
References
Aristotle. (2004). Nicomachean ethics (R. Crisp, Trans.). Cambridge University Press. (Original work published ca. 350 BCE)
Howe, D. (1987). An introduction to social work theory. Gower Publishing.
Kuhn, T. S. (1996). The structure of scientific revolutions (3rd ed.). University of Chicago Press.
Payne, M. (2020). Modern social work theory (5th ed.). Oxford University Press.
Richmond, M. (1917). Social diagnosis. Russell Sage Foundation.
Thomassen, M. (2006). Science, knowledge and practice: Philosophy of science for health and social professions. Gyldendal Akademisk.
Aadland, E. (2018). And I look at you … Philosophy of science in health and social professions (4th ed.). Universitetsforlaget.
For helping another person
is not only about solving a problem.
It is also about encountering a life.