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Factors That Impact a Social Worker's Capacity to Supervise a Student
Authors:Nicole Hill  Helen Cleak  Ronnie Egan  Lesley Ervin  Jody Laughton
Institution:1. School of Health Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia;2. School of Public Health &3. Social Work, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia;4. School of Global Urban and Social Studies, RMIT University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia;5. College of Health and Biomedicine, Victoria University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Abstract:With sector constraints and higher education economic imperatives increasingly impacting the provision of social work field education, university programs lack an understanding of the factors that enable or prohibit field educators’ capacity to provide placements. Despite the significance of field education in the curriculum, it remains unclear what the experiences and motivations of field educators are to provide universities with student placements. This research addresses this gap through surveying 101 field educators that attended statewide Victorian field education training. Results indicated that although field educators recognised the benefits of supervising students, workload relief, additional training, and further student placement preparation by the university were emphasised as the primary factors that would enable them to respond positively to placement requests. Payments for placements did not necessarily ameliorate these issues nor guarantee the provision of more placements. The implications of these findings for universities and the field are discussed.
Keywords:Social Work  Field Education  Placements  Universities  Field Educators  Social Work Students
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