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THE
INTERNATIONAL CHILD AND YOUTH CARE NETWORK
READING FOR CHILD
AND YOUTH CARE WORKERS EDITORIAL Isolated communities, isolated workers Did you get the interview with Jeannie Karth in the February issue, or Shelley Gilberg and Grant Charles's article last month? If so, you will have noticed the striking similarities, in countries as far apart as South Africa and Canada, in perceptions and views on isolated and rural child and youth care. Geography often imposes vast isolation on our colleagues who work in rural programs — not only social and professional, but also in terms of the issues and problems of the community served. By their nature, rural communities are built on their tight histories and circumstances, and they inevitably develop their own distinctive characteristics. Gilberg and Charles put it like this:
Those of us who work in cities can be reassured that our supervisor is as near as the telephone — or at least that we can discuss ideas with colleagues in the downtown coffee shop. For rural workers, fellow workers are not so easily at hand, and the issues which they might like to talk over are probably more complex and local than we can understand. (Isolation is, of course, not restricted to rural areas. We all know fellow workers who work in communities or programs just down the road who may similarly feel themselves to be remote — philosophically, culturally, denominationally — and who also appreciate the inclusion and contact of colleagues.) A funny thing about child and youth care — there may be a clear and comprehensive "curriculum" of things we should know and which we can learn in our training, but all of this becomes secondary, just a small part of the action, when we actually engage with a client. Suddenly there are no fixed formulae or standard methods; the situation is new, the encounter will have its own possibilities; we may know nothing that is useful. And yet we nevertheless need that curriculum, because it is at least a collection of reference points, maps, hyperlinks, stories and ideas which add to the simple people we are when we practise our own special craft. And it is, certainly, an assortment of stuff we can offer to others, to apply (if applicable!) in their own situations.
This is just to remind everyone that when you read and write on our e-mail discussion group* or when you visit the web site, there will be even more of our colleagues who are geographically isolated. Welcoming them into an internet fellowship where they can feel supported and less professionally isolated will be up to us. As Jeannie Karth observed in her interview,
BG * Anyone involved in child and youth care is welcome to join CYC-NET's daily discussion group. Just click here to be included. ______
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