Permission to be Human: Moving from Blame to Systems Thinking
In this episode of Relational Practice: A Social Work Podcast, Dr. Jodie Park and Rose Mackey tackle the heavy weight of professional fallibility. We often feel that because we work with human lives, we aren’t allowed the luxury of being human ourselves, leading to those 3:00 AM "mistake loops" in our minds.
Using the seminal work of Professor Eileen Munro, we dismantle the idea that errors are simply acts of incompetence. Instead, we explore how the high-pressure environments of child protection and social work naturally trigger cognitive biases and mental shortcuts.
In this episode, we discuss:
* The Core Conflict: Balancing fast, intuitive reasoning with slow, logical analytic thinking.
* Reasoning Traps: How "Confirmation Bias," "Availability Bias," and "The Primacy Effect" can skew our assessments of families.
* The Systems Approach: Why we need to stop asking "Who messed up?" and start asking "Why did this mistake make sense at the time?".
* Building Skilled Intuition: Using supervision as a "lab" to socialize our thinking and "de-bias" our practice.
Whether you work in child protection, hospitals, schools, mental health, aged care, or any frontline role where human complexity meets high-pressure decision-making, this episode is a reminder that professional integrity isn’t about being perfect. It is about being transparent in your reasoning and brave enough to treat mistakes as an inevitable part of a system built on uncertainty.
Show Notes & Resources
* Visit our new website: relationalpracticeasocialworkpodcast.com.au [http://relationalpracticeasocialworkpodcast.com.au]
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* Get in touch: Email your practice stories to Relationalpractice01@gmail.com [Relationalpractice01@gmail.com].
* Featured Citations:
* Munro, E. (1999). Common errors of reasoning in child protection work.
* Munro, E. (2011). The Munro review of child protection: Final report—A child-centred system.
Editing by Angus Pinkstone
Music by Hannah Park
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