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Selecting social work students: lessons from research in Scotland
Authors:Viviene Cree  Fiona Morrison  Gary Clapton  Susan Levy  Richard Ingram
Institution:1. Social Work Studies, School of Social &2. Political Science, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK;3. Centre for Child Wellbeing and Protection, University of Stirling, Stirling, UK;4. Social Work, School of Education and Social Work, The University of Dundee, Dundee, UK
Abstract:The issue of selection of students to social work programmes is one that remains highly contested. While it is clear that there is no single way of choosing the next generation of social work students, nevertheless, there are a number of strongly held beliefs about what ‘best practice’ means in this fraught field. These can be difficult to challenge, and even harder to shift, in spite of contrary evidence. This paper presents research conducted in Scotland in 2016 as part of the Scottish Government-sponsored Review of Social Work Education. The research set out to consider what selection processes were being used in Scotland and why; more fundamentally, it sought to explore the views of those involved in social work education alongside evidence about the outcomes of the selection processes (that is, data on student retention and success). The article concludes that while there is little evidence that one method of selection to social work programmes is intrinsically better than another, issues of fairness and transparency in selection, as well as diversity, remain pressing.
Keywords:Selection to social work programmes  social work profession  research  Scotland  international
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