1st Edition

A Student's Guide to Placements in Health and Social Care Settings From Theory to Practice

Edited By Simon Williams, Diana Conroy Copyright 2022
    220 Pages
    by Routledge

    220 Pages
    by Routledge

    Supporting students on placements in health and social care settings, this accessible guide provides a framework for understanding the theory behind successful practice as well as the critical skills needed to apply it.

    A Student's Guide to Placements in Health and Social Care Settings takes theory beyond the classroom and apply it to real settings, enabling students to recognise their own learning journey and develop their own distinct professional identity within a wider interprofessional context.

    This is a key resource for placement experience with insights from experts and advice direct from students who have already been on placement. With clear guidelines, and structured so that you can dip into different chapters as needed, it responds to the unique nature of placement opportunities and is the first line resource students should turn to.

    Whatever course you’re studying in the caring profession - Social Work, Health and Social Care, Youth Work, Nursing or Counselling – this is essential reading to help understand how theory can support and improve your placement experience, ensuring you get the very most out of it.

    Part 1: Pre Placement

    1. Being Prepared

    2. Reflection

    3. Emotional Resilience

    4. Anti-Oppressive Practice

    Part 2: During Placement

    5. Working with in the context of an agency

    6. Placements in challenging settings

    7. Managing your placement and supervision

    8. Technology and digital literacy

    9. Resource of self

    Part 3: Advanced Skills

    10. Inter-professional learning and working

    11. Involving others

    12. Managing projects

    13. Measuring impact

    Glossary

    Index

    Biography

    Simon Williams has over twenty years’ experience of Youth and Community Work, and six years’ experience in teaching at higher education, during which he has been a placement coordinator, working with both agencies and students to develop the best student experience on placement possible. 

    Diana Conroy has wide experience of working in wellbeing, health and social care.  She has worked as a social worker and within the NHS.  She is Senior Lecturer in Counselling and Psychotherapy teaching modules on understanding health and social care systems, creativity and meta-awareness and the unconscious. 

    A student’s guide to placements in health and social care settings, from theory to practice is edited by Williams and Conroy and published by Critical Publishing. Interestingly, it does not feel like an edited book, as there is a common voice across all the chapters. The book is aimed at any student undertaking a placement in either a healthcare or social care setting which works well, as it does not try to prescribe what the placement should look like. Instead, the book focuses on the holistic underpinning principles of experiential placement learning to be able to combine the student’s knowledge and skills. As such, this accessible book is a must read for any health or social care student who wants to engage in deep learning whilst on placement.

    Paula BeesleySenior Lecturer in Social Work, Leeds Beckett University