INTERVENSI INDIVIDU DALAM PERUBAHAN PERILAKU ANAK JALANAN DI RUMAH PERLINDUNGAN SOSIAL KOTA MEDAN
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Abstract
Street children remain one of Indonesia’s most vulnerable groups, facing violence, exploitation, and limited access to education. This paper documents an individual intervention conducted during a fieldwork placement at a Social Shelter in Medan. Using Charles Zastrow’s six-stage casework method—engagement, assessment, planning, intervention, evaluation, and termination—and guided by Kurt Lewin’s three-stage behaviour-change model (unfreezing, changing, refreezing), the practitioner worked with a child under the age of 18 who had been living on the street for a considerable time and refused schooling. Data were collected through participant observation, in-depth interviews, and internal documentation (assessment records, progress notes, and ecomap). The qualitative, descriptive analysis shows a significant behavioural shift: (1) the client developed awareness of the risks of street life (unfreezing); (2) began practising positive routines such as emotional regulation and study habits (changing); and (3) committed to re-entering formal education while distancing from negative peer groups (refreezing). These findings affirm that a structured casework approach, supported by Lewin’s theory and ecomap-based assessment, can foster sustainable behavioural change in street children.alleviation.
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