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The Mission of Field Education
From Practitioner to Educator
UW School of Social Work(http:depts.washington.edu/sswweb/practicum)
Competency Objectives:
• 1) Describe rationale for field instructor training;
• 2) Define mission of the UWSSW and purpose of field education: practice application of social work principles, competencies and curriculum;
• 3) Demonstrate understanding of the importance of the field instructor in helping student develop educational competencies;
• 4) Articulate the requirements of practicum
Why Field Instruction Training?
• Field education is ‘the signature pedagogy of social work’: CSWE
• EPAS guidelines mandate field instruction training to agency-based field instructors
Field supervision requires advanced training due to a teaching element
Training Rationale
• Social work skills do not indicate expertise in teaching those skills.
Studies have identified knowledge and skills necessary for effective field supervision; CSWE developed modules
Competency-based training models help PIs reinforce student competency development (measurable knowledge, values, skills, and behaviors)
Intro to The UW SSW Field Instructor Training Program
• Provides specialized knowledge and skills for effective field education/supervision.
• Ten modules delivered over 14 hours:– Mission - Integrating Theory– Agency Orientation - Evaluations– Adult Learning - Cultural Competency– Learning Contract - Ethics in Practicum– Supervision - Challenging Situations
MISSION OF FIELD EDUCATION:
Practicum is capstone of social work education: Learn by doing, under supervision of
experienced practitioners trained to instruct; Apply social work knowledge and skills obtained
in classroom; develop competencies; Successfully integrate theory into practice; Prepare students to begin social work practice
within an agency setting.
Critical Role of Field Instructor
• Research on social workers as educators: • Supervisory style and characteristics of
the field instructor have a significant impact on students’ evaluations of the instructor and the placement experience;
• Most significant factor affecting students’ satisfaction with the field placement: Quality of field instruction
Discussion
Review participant field experience• What qualities made an effective
practicum instructor?• What experiences or qualities created a
negative learning experience?
Field Instructor Has Opportunity
to significantly influence the education and training of a future social worker;
to influence all of the student’s future interactions with clients;
To play a role in shaping the future of social work practice and our profession
Goals of Field Instruction
• Create learning opportunities for students to integrate theory and practice
• Teach students how to practice social work, NOT how to do a particular job in a particular agency
• Helping students learn how to use social work skills effectively
• Teach how to use social work knowledge and values to inform their actions
Challenges of Field Education
Demonstrate understanding of how to develop and use competencies (knowledge, values, and skills) for effective practice,
Help students see how to apply these abilities to any practice setting: how to engage a client, stakeholder, or constituent, how to build rapport, how to set goals, how to develop tasks to reach those goals, effective and ethical practice
Creating a Vision
first task: create a vision of qualities and characteristics your student should attain by end of placement;
immediate vision: helping the student apply knowledge to a practice setting;
larger vision: instructor’s role in the life and professional development of the student and their client’s well-being
Mission of School and Curriculum – Access School Website
• Instructors must incorporate the School’s mission, principles, curriculum objectives, and Core Competency Development
• Review UW SSW mission
(http: depts.washington.edu/sswweb/mission/) (http: depts.washington.edu/sswweb/programs)
Incorporating SSW Core Values
• Instructors are expected to support and reinforce the School’s core principles:– Empowerment– Multiculturalism– Social Justice– Social Change
• Help students assess & incorporate these in practice:– Agency commitment to these values– Comparison of agency and School mission and agency success
and status re meeting both missions– Dialogue about challenges and differences between ideal and
the real; ways to influence change and justice
BASW/Foundation Objectives
• Access Handout 1C• Review purpose of Foundation year:
– Intro to the profession: values, ethics, conduct– Generalist, entry level skills– Micro, mezzo, macro exposure and learning
opportunities– Learning to use supervision– Identification of strengths and niche for
advanced year
Advanced MSW Concentrations
• Access Handout 1D• Review Concentration Specializations
Advanced MSW Concentrations Access Handout 1D
• Review Concentration Specializations– Day Program
• Administration/Policy• Children, Youth, Families, Elders• Health/Mental Health• Community-Centered Integrative Practice
– Extended Degree Program• Integrative Health/Mental Health• Children, Youth, Families, Multigenerational Pct.
Competency-Based Education
• 2008 CSWE Mandates re Required Competencies and related Practice Behaviors = revised curriculum
• Focus is on outcomes expected• Learning to be reflected in demonstrable
skills (practice behaviors)• Practice Behaviors are to be assessed via
visible, specific, measurable activities
Ten Competencies
• Identity as a SW• Ethics• Critical Thinking• Diversity• Human Rights and
Social Justice• Research / Evidence-
Based Practice
• Human Behavior in the Social Environment
• Policy• Contextual Practice• Practice skills in
– Engagement– Assessment– Intervention– Evaluation
Review Competencies (handouts 1E.1- 1E.5)
• Ten competencies are incorporated into new Learning Contracts and Evaluations, each with detailed practice expectations
• BASW/Foundation focus: generalist practice at micro/mezzo/macro levels; professional roles, behavior, ethics
• Review Foundation Competencies and Practice Behaviors
• Review Adv. Competencies/Behaviors
Activities to Match Curriculum Requirements and be Measured
• Student activities to meet required competencies, student interests, agency needs; and measurable practice behaviors
• Practice behaviors to be measured through documentation, observation, presentations, supervision discussion, etc.
• Instructors legally responsible for work of student; insure adequate oversight of practicum, and supervision documentation
Activity: Teaching to Competencies - Handout 1F
• Identify agency mission with mission and social work services and compatibility with SSW mission and competency education
• Identify areas of agency overlap and challenge in providing instruction in SW competencies
• Module 4 will assist in developing agency-specific activities to meet competency requirements;
• Assigned Field Faculty can also consult, assist
UW SSW Programs (handout 1C, 1D )
• BASW / Foundation Objectives (handout)– Generalist practice with micro, mezzo, macro
level assessments, interventions, evaluation• Two year MSW Day Program• Three year Extended Degree Program
(EDP) for working professionals; • One year Advanced Standing MSW • MSW Advanced Concentrations (handout)
Practicum Credit Requirements
To be completed with Practicum Instructor:• Individualized Learning Contract: tasks
designed to build competencies• Weekly instruction and supervision: to monitor
progress, provide time for reflection & feedback• Quarterly Evaluations: to describe and rate
progress towards competencies, development• Eval cover sheet: signatures, hours, credit
recommendation submitted to field faculty
Partners in Education(handouts 1G, 1H)
• Practicum education requires a three-way partnership: student, PI/agency, field faculty
• Roles and Expectations handout emphasizes need for communication, coordination, understanding of Practicum as a class in which all have responsibilities and involvement
• Expectations of Agencies handout focuses on need for agency to support PI and provide a positive learning environment; student hours
Practicum Credit Hours
• BASW: 480 hours over 3 quarters (4 credits/160 hrs./quarter = 16 hours/week)
• MSW Foundation: 320 hours/8 credits– DAY: Two quarters, 4 credits/160 hours each– EDP: Negotiable schedule, start Spring or
Summer• MSW Advanced: 720 hours/18 credits
– DAY: 3 quarters, 240 hours/6 credits/quarter– EDP: Negotiable, start Spring or Summer