This paper discusses how the COVID-19 pandemic can shift the conversation of paid and unpaid placements from an economic to a pedagogical and goodwill perspective. During the pandemic lockdown many placements were cancelled or postponed. Some continued as agreed but with students working from home, while other placements became unpaid. We build on the pertinent literature that raises legal, ethical, economic and pedagogical implications of paid versus unpaid placement models and what motivates placement organizations to offer placements. Four interdisciplinary trans-Tasman case studies are discussed to better understand the complex situations for placement organizations and universities to sustain WIL placements during this pandemic. Conclu...
This article draws on research undertaken by the Professional Association of Lecturers in Youth and ...
Engaging with a critical view of discourses on the transition between university and the workplace, ...
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the practice of work-integrated learning (WIL) has been signi...
While there is growing evidence about the financial burden of completing long, compulsory (mostly un...
Internationally, COVID-19 has forced educational reform and disrupted already strained social work f...
The work placement experiences of MA and BA social work students at an English university during a p...
Social work student placements were significantly impacted over the past two years as a result of th...
It is well understood that authentic and mutually beneficial school and university partnerships are ...
This paper describes and explores e-placements that engaged social work students in semester 1 of 20...
As the fear of mortality struck humanity, a new age dawned in the relational styles, processes, and ...
Students can benefit from applying their emerging skillsets through a work placement, both in terms ...
In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, universities had to shift much of their teaching online. This ...
BackgroundClinical placements for medical students in the United Kingdom (UK) came to an abrupt halt...
From PubMed via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: received 2021-07-06, revised 2021-07-22, accepted 2...
This article focuses on an international social work placement undertaken in Battambang, Cambodia. T...
This article draws on research undertaken by the Professional Association of Lecturers in Youth and ...
Engaging with a critical view of discourses on the transition between university and the workplace, ...
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the practice of work-integrated learning (WIL) has been signi...
While there is growing evidence about the financial burden of completing long, compulsory (mostly un...
Internationally, COVID-19 has forced educational reform and disrupted already strained social work f...
The work placement experiences of MA and BA social work students at an English university during a p...
Social work student placements were significantly impacted over the past two years as a result of th...
It is well understood that authentic and mutually beneficial school and university partnerships are ...
This paper describes and explores e-placements that engaged social work students in semester 1 of 20...
As the fear of mortality struck humanity, a new age dawned in the relational styles, processes, and ...
Students can benefit from applying their emerging skillsets through a work placement, both in terms ...
In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, universities had to shift much of their teaching online. This ...
BackgroundClinical placements for medical students in the United Kingdom (UK) came to an abrupt halt...
From PubMed via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: received 2021-07-06, revised 2021-07-22, accepted 2...
This article focuses on an international social work placement undertaken in Battambang, Cambodia. T...
This article draws on research undertaken by the Professional Association of Lecturers in Youth and ...
Engaging with a critical view of discourses on the transition between university and the workplace, ...
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the practice of work-integrated learning (WIL) has been signi...