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Post-qualifying child care social work : developing reflective practice PDF

179 Pages·2009·6.466 MB·English
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Post-Qualifying Child Care Social Work 99778811441122992288225500--FFMM..iinndddd ii 1100//1100//22000088 33::4455::2233 PPMM 99778811441122992288225500--FFMM..iinndddd iiii 1100//1100//22000088 33::4455::2233 PPMM Post-Qualifying Child Care Social Work Developing Refl ective Practice Edited by Gillian Ruch 99778811441122992288225500--FFMM..iinndddd iiiiii 1100//1100//22000088 33::4455::2233 PPMM Editorial arrangement and Chapters 1, 3, 4, 9 and 12 © Gillian Ruch 2009 Foreword © Dr Gillian Bridge Chapter 2 © Gill Tunney Chapter 5 © Chris Warren-Adamson Chapter 6 © Kish Bhatti-Sinclair Chapter 7 © Tim Gully Chapter 8 © Fiona McKinnon Chapter 10 © Teri Rogers Chapter 11 © Chris Warren-Adamson First published 2009 Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form, or by any means, only with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of repro- graphic reproduction, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduc- tion outside those terms should be sent to the publishers. SAGE Publications Ltd 1 Oliver’s Yard 55 City Road London EC1Y 1SP SAGE Publications Inc. 2455 Teller Road Th ousand Oaks, California 91320 SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd B 1/I 1 Mohan Cooperative Industrial Area Mathura Road New Delhi 110 044 SAGE Publications Asia-Pacifi c Pte Ltd 33 Pekin Street #02-01 Far East Square Singapore 048763 Library of Congress Control Number: 2008924219 British Library Cataloguing in Publication data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978-1-4129-2825-0 ISBN 978-1-4129-2826-7 (pbk) Typeset by Cepha Imaging Pvt. Ltd., Bangalore, India Printed in Great Britain by TJ International Ltd, Padstow, Cornwall Printed on paper from sustainable resources 99778811441122992288225500--FFMM..iinndddd iivv 1100//1100//22000088 33::4455::2233 PPMM Contents Foreword vii Part One: Th e contemporary framework of post-qualifi cation child care practice 1 Introduction – developing holistic social work practitioners 3 Gillian Ruch 2 Th e PQ framework, PQ and CPD developments: consolidation unit 8 Gill Tunney 3 Refl ective practice and refl ective spaces 19 Gillian Ruch 4 Observational practices in working with children and families 31 Gillian Ruch 5 Every Child Matters and the context for inter-professional and inter-agency practice 41 Chris Warren-Adamson 6 Practice education and ‘enabli ng others’ 49 Kish Bhatti-Sinclair Part Two: Th e post-qualifi cation curriculum 7 Focus on the child 61 Tim Gully 8 Child observation and professional practice 79 Fiona McKinnon 9 ‘Holding the child in mind’: working in partnership with children, their families, carers and professionals 96 Gillian Ruch 99778811441122992288225500--FFMM..iinndddd vv 1100//1100//22000088 33::4455::2233 PPMM vi Contents 10 Innovatory and regulatory practice in contemporary child care social work 113 Teri Rogers 11 Collaborative practice and its complexity 132 Chris Warren-Adamson Part Th ree: Continuing professional development and future directions 12 Th e way ahead: refl ective practice and relationships 151 Gillian Ruch Bibliography 154 Index 165 99778811441122992288225500--FFMM..iinndddd vvii 1100//1100//22000088 33::4455::2233 PPMM Foreword It is an honour to be invited to write a foreword to this book. Having spent almost 40 years of my professional life developing social work education and training, with particular reference to child wel- fare, I welcome the opportunity to comment on this collection of papers designed in response to the new post-qualifi cation framework for social work with children and families (GSCC, 2005). Th e aims, design and content of social work training have altered radically from the early days of the Charity Organisation Society. Over a century ago, the fi rst social work course was set up at the London School of Economics as a series of evening lectures to inform, ‘young ladies’ engaged in voluntary work about the social sciences. By 2005, social work training had expanded, became clearer about knowledge, skills and values components and had an established qualifi cation route within the university system. In the UK, aspiring social workers should undertake as a minimum qualifi cation an undergraduate degree, followed by a range of post-qualifi cation specialist courses, at the masters and doctorate levels. Additionally, social workers have recognised roles and tasks within the legal frame- work, in social policy and in the agencies for services delivery, both local authorities and voluntary sector organisations. Th us, from its early days of voluntary, philanthropic activity, social work has become recognised as a professional activity and a legally recognised career path. Th is is an impressive achievement. It is inevitable and appropriate that social work has adjusted over time to societal, economic and political changes. Relevant education and training systems have been developed in response to these changing practices. While in many ways these changes have been necessary and appropriate, many academics and practitioners engaged in education and training have experienced them as happening too frequently and being overly re active to criticism, particularly from the media. When organisa- tions are under threat, they tend to adopt survival techniques, allowing changes to be made perhaps too hastily with insuffi cient attention to potential losses. Applying these observations to specialist training in child care social work, it is clear that training has been buff eted from all sides by a range of processes. One of the most signifi cant of these has been government responses to child deaths fuelled by the media. Major legislative and policy initiatives have been the direct result of an inquiry into a child death or criticisms of social work practice in risk assessment. Th e inquiry by Lord Laming into the death of Victoria Climbié (DoH, 2003) is the most recent example contributing signifi cantly to the Every Child Matters agenda. From the perspectives of social policy, political shifts away from universal approaches to social wel- fare have had a profound impact on social work with families. Th atcherism, characterised by empha- sising non-intervention, self-reliance and new managerialism, led to the introduction of standardised frameworks for assessment. Although these have the advantage of making professional activity more transparent and therefore more accountable, there are real dangers, that practice has become 99778811441122992288225500--FFMM..iinndddd vviiii 1100//1100//22000088 33::4455::2244 PPMM viii Foreword mechanistic and that training requirements have gradually adjusted in response. Training has become more structured, too heavily dependent on competence indicators and overly reliant on the ‘what works’ agenda’ in research. Lower priority seems to have been given to capacity for refl ection in education and training struc- tures. Th is must remain a crucial element within training at all levels because of the unique nature of the circumstances involving social work activity. Th roughout history, it has been essential for social workers to refl ect before they respond to the most complex and often painful circumstances requir- ing their intervention. It is the strength of this edited book that the refl ection process is drawn back to the centre of the social work training arena alongside observational and collaborative practice, aspects of the work underpinning all interventions. Capacities to observe, refl ect and to collaborate should take root at the undergraduate level and be nurtured, so that they fl ower and infuse all post- qualifi cation initiatives. A further strength of this book is its being aware of the need to listen to service users and also to the voices of students. Th eirs is the direct proof that these themes of refl ection and observation play a critical part in professional learning. Th e vivid illustrations provided by students enrich the chapters prepared by their very experienced teachers who have contributed to this volume. Future students of post-qualifying social work training courses specialising in child care will fi nd this volume a valuable companion to their studies. In the ‘evening phase’ of my career, it inspires me with hope that the things I have always held essential to practice have not been lost. No training courses can be static, but should be responsive to current and future professional demands, building on existing strengths derived from decades of evolution. Th e editor and contributors deserve praise for the quality and content of each of the chapters and for the eff ective marrying of unique student experience with established research and literature. Dr. Gillian Bridge Former Senior Lecturer in the Department of Social Policy at the London School of Economics and External Examiner for the Wessex Post-Qualifi cation Child Care Award 99778811441122992288225500--FFMM..iinndddd vviiiiii 1100//1100//22000088 33::4455::2244 PPMM Part One The contemporary framework of post-qualifi cation child care practice 99778811441122992288225500--CChh--0011..iinndddd 11 1100//77//22000088 1122::1144::1177 PPMM

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