Q2
5 Marks

Part A (Q2): How Scaling is useful in Social Work Research?

Expert Answer

Scaling is the process of measuring or ordering entities with respect to quantitative attributes or traits. In social work research, it involves assigning numbers or symbols to subjective, intangible concepts (like attitudes, feelings, or behaviors) to quantify them for analysis.

Usefulness in Social Work Research:

  1. Measuring the Unmeasurable: Social workers often deal with abstract concepts like "marital satisfaction," "depression severity," or "community cohesion." Scaling (e.g., Likert scales, semantic differential scales) allows researchers to translate these subjective feelings into quantifiable data that can be statistically analyzed.
  2. Standardization: Scales provide a standardized way to measure phenomena across different clients or populations, ensuring consistency in data collection and allowing for reliable comparisons.
  3. Evaluating Interventions: By using a scale before and after an intervention (e.g., measuring anxiety levels on a 1-10 scale before and after cognitive behavioral therapy), a social worker can objectively assess whether the intervention was effective.
  4. Efficiency: Standardized scales (like questionnaires) allow researchers to gather a large amount of nuanced data relatively quickly compared to conducting deep, unstructured interviews with every participant.