See, for example, FanshelDavid (ed.), Research in Social Welfare Administration, National Association of Social Workers, New York, 1962, p. 124.
2.
See, for example, Voluntary Health and Welfare Agencies in the United States, Schoolmasters' Press, New York, 1961, p. 17.
3.
ThomsonDeryck, “The Concept of Service Accountability and its Application Within a Casework Setting,”Social Worker, Vol. XXX, June–July 1962, p. 49.
4.
FrankelEmil, “Standardization of Social Statistics,” in Proceedings of the National Conference of Social Work, Fifty-third Annual Session held in Cleveland, Ohio, May 26–June 2, 1926University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1926, p. 558.
5.
BeckDorothy Fahs, Patterns in Use of Family Agency Service, Family Service Association of America, New York, 1961.
6.
“Who Comes to Family Service,” a report prepared by Shirley Terreberry, Family Agency Study Group, United Community Services of Metropolitan Detroit, Detroit, 1962.
7.
McMillenA. W., Measurement in Social Work, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1930, pp.
8.
KramerMorton and others, “National Approach to the Evaluation of Community Mental Health Programs,”American Journal of Public Health, Vol. LI, July 1961, pp. 969–79.
9.
McMillenA. W., op. cit., pp. 138–49; and Emil Frankel, op. cit., pp. 558–62.