Summary: This paper describes the findings from the evaluation of a UK initiative which engaged social work students as community partners within an educational based family intervention programme. Fourteen social work students in the first year of a BA (Hons) were placed in the programme to meet the volunteering requirements of their 'Community Project'. By engaging with the community-based family programme at an early stage in their education, students experienced the benefits of interventions, focussing on sustainability, citizenship and parent participation. We describe the approach and discuss the evaluation outcomes to illustrate the potential of utilising co-learning with families in social work education. In taking up the role of...
This paper explores the ways that social work practice learning, through community development proje...
Interweaving community engagement into education coheres with social work’s commitment to social jus...
The involvement of stakeholders – academics, service users and carers, students and practitioners – ...
Families and Schools Together (FAST) is an international evidence based parenting programme delivere...
We believe that community activism and citizen partnership are integral to social work education and...
In the last 5 years there has been an increased drive to include the perspectives and contributions ...
This article describes an innovative project that combined service learning and community-based part...
How is community development and community engagement currently taught within social work programmes...
This paper describes an attempt to incorporate the experiences of service user parents who had been ...
Social work is committed to challenging inequality and discrimination, supporting social justice and...
The involvement of people with lived experience (service participants) is mandatory within UK social...
This article considers the utilisation of the common third to prepare social work students for pract...
The UK Government has categorically stated in its Knowledge and Skills Statement for Children and Fa...
Interweaving community engagement into education coheres with social work’s commitment to social jus...
This research paper argues that universities can collaboratively generate productive spaces for soci...
This paper explores the ways that social work practice learning, through community development proje...
Interweaving community engagement into education coheres with social work’s commitment to social jus...
The involvement of stakeholders – academics, service users and carers, students and practitioners – ...
Families and Schools Together (FAST) is an international evidence based parenting programme delivere...
We believe that community activism and citizen partnership are integral to social work education and...
In the last 5 years there has been an increased drive to include the perspectives and contributions ...
This article describes an innovative project that combined service learning and community-based part...
How is community development and community engagement currently taught within social work programmes...
This paper describes an attempt to incorporate the experiences of service user parents who had been ...
Social work is committed to challenging inequality and discrimination, supporting social justice and...
The involvement of people with lived experience (service participants) is mandatory within UK social...
This article considers the utilisation of the common third to prepare social work students for pract...
The UK Government has categorically stated in its Knowledge and Skills Statement for Children and Fa...
Interweaving community engagement into education coheres with social work’s commitment to social jus...
This research paper argues that universities can collaboratively generate productive spaces for soci...
This paper explores the ways that social work practice learning, through community development proje...
Interweaving community engagement into education coheres with social work’s commitment to social jus...
The involvement of stakeholders – academics, service users and carers, students and practitioners – ...