The Social Worker / Le travailleur social
In this episode of The Social Worker Podcast, we speak with Sophia Thomas as part of CASW’s special series celebrating 100 years of social work in Canada. Sophia brings us into the realities, complexities, and beauty of rural practice. From growing up in rural Saskatchewan to becoming a social worker, educator, and researcher, Sophia reflects on what it means to work in communities where everyone is connected, resources can be scarce, and social workers are often called to be creative, flexible, and deeply relational. Throughout the conversation, Sophia speaks about the “dance” of rural practice: being both a community member and a service provider, navigating dual roles, building trust, and showing up with humility. She also reflects on the importance of working in meaningful partnership with Indigenous communities, listening first, respecting local knowledge, and allowing community needs to guide the work rather than rigid expectations. Sophia also shares insights from her thesis on the mental health and well-being of post-secondary students in rural Saskatchewan. Her research reminds us that education, isolation, access, culture, stress, and mental health are deeply connected, and that rural students deserve learning environments where they can feel supported, seen, and connected. This episode invites us to reimagine rural social work not as practice with “less,” but as practice that asks for more creativity, more listening, more humility, and more intentional connection.
9 episodes
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