www.bournemouth.ac.uk dr sara ashencaen crabtree & professor jonathan parker school of health...
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www.bournemouth.ac.uk
Dr Sara Ashencaen Crabtree & Professor Jonathan Parker
School of Health & Social Care
Bournemouth University
West meets East: Learning andtransition in social work placement
education
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Practice learning in social work at BU
• Practice learning across the 3 years
• Portfolio of evidence
Emerging goals:
Increasing international SW placements for cultural competence
Enhancing mobility, transferrable skills, marketability
Commensurate with internationalisation strategic goals of BU
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Producing culturally competent social work practitioners – project
background
British Council PMI 2 Connect Grant & existing academic contacts created internationalisation opportunity
Two participating universities:
Universiti Malaysia Sarawak (East Malaysia). (Young institution; established SW programme)
Malaysian placements educationally experimental and as part of a collaborative research process
Universiti Sains Malaysia (Penang). APEX status, oldest established SW programme.
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Producing culturally competent social work practitioners
Students selected through rigorous interviews:
motivation, knowledge of international social work/welfare, self-awareness, flexibility
Ability to adapt and benefit from opportunity not easily assessed in interview situation
Students involved in data gathering and learning through critical incident analysis, assignment and practice log
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Features of the practice log
• Describing reactions to daily events and experiences on placement and in the cultural context
• Consider different ways of thinking about it• Examine how the experience links with others –
consider emotional, cognitive and belief factors • Explore how the experience might be understood
drawing on theoretical learning undertaken• What has been learned from the situation?• What has been identified that needs to learned,
changed and developed?• How might identified learning goals be achieved?
Well-tried and tested pedagogical methods
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Critical Incidents
Critical incidents are reflections based on an analysis of a practice where the individual has taken some action and whatever he or she does has important consequences either for him or herself, the service user, others involved or all of the players.
(Thomas, 2004, p. 104)
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Reflections and beginning themes from 2009 cohort
Relational/ interpersonal
Friendliness
Well-behaved and polite
Discipline and corporal punishment
Communication issues
Expressing emotions cultural
Developing sensitivity in students
Importance of community
Assumptions about service users, women, Muslim women, female students
service
Overcrowded care homes
State vs NGO
Perceptions of abuse (sharing beds)
Service user involvement
Professionalism vs loose approach/ ‘real social work’
Lack of service planning
Different value systems for care
High level skills
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Supporting practice learning through supervision
• Increased from 20 to 25 day placement• Malaysian academic group supervision• Malaysian agency daily supervision• Retaining continuity through use of practice
educators in UK• BU multimedia tutor support• Selling benefits of international placements • Selling concept of distance learning in UK
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Young adults with learning disabilities, 2009
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Sarawak Mental Health Association, 2009
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Clash of cultures
Professional expectations
Social expectations Personal beliefs
Poverty of services/rudimentary No concept of abuse Infantilisation Sex taboo/ education Lack of consultation & opportunities for emotional expression Less emphasis on systems, values, standards, professionalism, boundaries, confidentiality; labels no benefit Take children to assessments Lack of care planning Positive appreciation of skills & therapy Lack of training
Friendliness Community & family oriented Assumptions about women, students and sex segregation High regard for UK against students views of colonialism High regard for student knowledge Different opportunities Different social interaction Corporal punishment and behaviour Lack of conscious risk avoidance
Communication Need to be immersed in order to learn Challenge to religious belief, value and social views
Analysis of data, 1st cohort 2009
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Preliminary research findings, 2009
• Early analysis of data indicate student culture shock: incongruence between Westernised social work values/practice and those practised in Malaysia
• Uncertainties re whether to challenge professional conduct contradicting UK professional codes of practice
• Analysis showed levels of deep learning = ability to link theory to practice, open to cultural nuance
• And shallow learning = superficial comparison, taking refuge in ‘known’ truths and values
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Preliminary research findings
• Students used their ‘outsider’ experiences to develop:• insights into the dehumanising aspects of
social care processes for service users in the UK
• a more critical perspective of each society in terms of welfare, social, educational, employment opportunities and citizen rights and responsibilities.
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Placements theorised through concept of liminality
Van Gennep/Turner: rites of passage. Agents first stripped of social status and introduced into a liminal (in-between) state before emerging transformed into a new status.
Betwixt status, confusion& transition evidenced inmany students’ international experiences.
Liminality goal - end of the
placement to emerge nearer to social work status, and culturally sensitive and aware.
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Cultural differences
Cultural comparisons and similarities
Professional Cultural & ethnic
Student differences
Addictions Child care & protection
Welfare state assumptions
Religious
Equality and egalitarianism
Boundaries
Internal social differences and dissonances
Communication issues
Personal concerns and dislocations
Gender Identity Personal difficulties
Religion
Second year analysis – two cohorts
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Liminality & professional expectations
‘We were told that the House of Hope was a safe place for the children. I asked how these children were safeguarded and the answer was “we love them”. To me this was a real culture shock…’.
‘My values were being questioned. I felt in a moral dilemma. I can understand that the agency cannot help every child due to lack of resources, staff and time but is it fair to favour a more academically able child over another?’
‘We actually went into the jungle and swam in a river with a very hot spring. I was concerned though that the children are not risk assessed. Is this ok?’
‘Several of the [cerebral palsy service users] were chained to the wall and windows with plastic chains or cloth, which was either tied to their wrists, feet or around their torso. So far as I could see all the service users were wearing diapers even those who were capable of walking.’
‘The “work place” where we would be working for the next two weeks astounded me; it is an amazing set up and works really well. The way that the service users get “promoted” and in turn teaches the other amazed me. It is such an efficient method and the young adults loved it.’
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Liminality & cultural & ethnic differences
‘The (Salvation Army) Major is considered to be the children’s mother and the staff are referred to as aunties and uncles!! One of the children asked me if I was their “aunty” and I immediately stated that I was not…In the UK this terminology would be frowned upon and I think would possibly raise some questions.’
‘It became apparent that these children were only admitted [to a Home] because they came from a single parent family and their mother could not afford to keep them. This seems bizarre!!...Why doesn’t the government do something to help single mothers…’
‘For them life is just about taking drugs. They hardly eat and use all their money to buy drugs. For many of them this is a lifestyle they have chosen because they could be earning up to 100 MYR (about £25) per day, which is more than what people earn as a receptionist or clerk in the office.’
‘Educational attainment is high as it is one thing that most seem to aspire to. People seem to be judged not on class but on whether they are a B.A., M.A. or Phd, and what work they do.’
‘I was very much a minority group but …did not feel discriminated against. People appeared interested by our presence, I hoped that this was not because I was from a developed country and they saw me as an oppressive figure.’
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Liminality: beliefs/values/identity - personal dislocations
‘The children already have tuition several times a week after school and my personal feelings are that they already have enough learning. I feel quality time with them such as nail painting, games and just talking would be far more beneficial for them’
‘…questioning Christianity; my own faith. I would not dream of challenging this but it is worrying that Christianity is being used in this way and [the agency] appears to be more of a cult – although I cannot prove this. And I must remember that I must not be judgemental as I am not here to be so.’
‘I have also been questioning whether impressing the English language on these children actually is the right thing to do.’ ‘I have realised that within myself I have accepted my own culture a lot more. Since I can remember I have always rejected the Indian side of me, but it was here that I learnt to relish in the fact that I am half Indian and it is something I should be proud of. ’
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Comparisons and challenging ethnocentrism: globally competent citizens?
• Diversity of challenging cultural experiences
• Questioning of assumptions and received ideas
• Potential for examining ‘risk’ and ‘risk-taking’
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