Leadership in Residential Child Care
Description
* the loss of qualified staff from the sector
* different models of professional competence that qualificationseeks to achieve
* the role qualification and training can play in enhancing thestatus of what is sometimes seen as the Cinderella element in childcare provision
Leadership in Residential Child Care discusses issues ofconsiderable relevance to managers and trainers seeking to maximisethe value they derive from the training provided to residentialchild care staff. The experience of special courses developed underthe Residential Child Care Initiative will be of interest to allthose concerned with the development of the sector from thoseconsidering the training needs of residential care staff, toteachers and tutors in universities and colleges of highereducation providing social work qualification programmes.
List of tables vii
About the Authors ix
Foreword xi
Acknowledgements xiii
1 The qualification debate 1
2 The evaluation of RCCI: research methods 31
3 Local authority training strategies and staff secondment 49
4 Issues in DipSW programme design, content and delivery 71
5 Teaching and learning: residential child case staff and their experience of DipSW programmes 88
6 Making the DipSW relevant for residential child care workers and managers 112
7 Returning to work 141
8 The return of secondees: the impact on the work environment 159
9 Training the residential child care managers of the future 190
Bibliography 215
Index 219
an intelligent and worthwhile book, which I would recommend"..(Children & Society, Vol.15 2001)"...a very useful and accessible review..." (TherapeuticCommunities, Vol.21, No.4, 2000)
Dione Hills and Camilla Child, both of The Tavistock Institute. In one enquiry after another, there has been a call for an increase in the proportion of qualified staff in residential child care services, as one of a range of solutions to the difficulties that have beset the service. Leadership in Residential Child Care compares and assesses courses available for professional social work training and explores the ways that training contributes to the quality of care in the sector. Drawing on an evaluation of the Residential Child Care Initiative, the authors examine the dilemmas concerning the provision of qualification training for residential care staff today. They address issues such as:
- the loss of qualified staff from the sector
- different models of ?professional competence? that qualification seeks to achieve
- the role qualification and training can play in enhancing the status of what is sometimes seen as the ?Cinderella? element in child care provision
PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9780471984771
BINDING:
Paperback
BISAC:
Social Science
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 153.00(W) x Dimensions: 231.50(H) x Dimensions: 13.50(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English