TY - JOUR
T1 - Preparing students for social work practice in contemporary societies: insights from a transnational research network.
AU - Laidlaw, Kirsteen
AU - Cabiati, Elena
AU - Henriksen, Oystein
AU - Shore, Caroline
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - This paper arises from a transnational research network investigating social
work education. University based social work programmes from four
European countries (Ireland, Italy, Norway, and the U.K.) shared a similar
concern: how educators can support students to prepare for social work
practice. The relationship between social work education and practice is
not straightforward; the partnership between educators and
practitioners in helping social work students to flourish in practice
remains a complex and, at times, controversial issue. Furthermore, it is
not enough to help students learn the mechanics of day to day tasks, it
is also important to motivate them in becoming social workers
stimulated by principles of human rights and social justice. With this in
mind, each educator conducted a local study using qualitative and/or
quantitative methods to explore what influences the development of
such practitioners. Analysis from the studies indicate three key issues for
social work education in Europe: developing strategies to help students
in preventing and overcoming ‘practice shock’; the promotion of
coherence as a way to bring into focus the complexity of the
interrelationships between theory and practice; the active engagement
of students and practice teachers in the evaluation and development of
contemporary social work education models.
AB - This paper arises from a transnational research network investigating social
work education. University based social work programmes from four
European countries (Ireland, Italy, Norway, and the U.K.) shared a similar
concern: how educators can support students to prepare for social work
practice. The relationship between social work education and practice is
not straightforward; the partnership between educators and
practitioners in helping social work students to flourish in practice
remains a complex and, at times, controversial issue. Furthermore, it is
not enough to help students learn the mechanics of day to day tasks, it
is also important to motivate them in becoming social workers
stimulated by principles of human rights and social justice. With this in
mind, each educator conducted a local study using qualitative and/or
quantitative methods to explore what influences the development of
such practitioners. Analysis from the studies indicate three key issues for
social work education in Europe: developing strategies to help students
in preventing and overcoming ‘practice shock’; the promotion of
coherence as a way to bring into focus the complexity of the
interrelationships between theory and practice; the active engagement
of students and practice teachers in the evaluation and development of
contemporary social work education models.
KW - Practice-readiness
KW - Social work education
KW - Practice-readiness
KW - Social work education
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/171325
U2 - 10.1080/13691457.2020.1793108
DO - 10.1080/13691457.2020.1793108
M3 - Article
SN - 1468-2664
SP - 980
EP - 991
JO - EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK
JF - EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK
ER -