Title: Towards Overcoming Barriers:
1- Towards Overcoming Barriers
- evaluating the impact of involving
- users and carers in a
- BA social work programme
- Shula Ramon, s.ramon_at_anglia.ac.uk
- Joanna Fox, j.r.fox_at_anglia.ac.uk
- Roxana Anghel, r.anghel_at_anglia.ac.uk
- JSWEC 2006, Cambridge
2- Values and Conceptual Underpinnings of
- User and Carer Involvement
- in Social Work Education
- Shula Ramon
3Such an involvement meets the wish to maintain
the values of
- Respect for people
- Social Inclusion
- Genuine Partnership
- Empowerment
- Strive for Equality and maintaining an
anti-discriminatory stance
4Reflecting the Values in the BA in Social Work
- Valuing the specific type of knowledge users and
carers have (experiential, subjective, based on
being at the receiving end of social work) - Ensuring users and carers perspectives are
represented on the programme, side by side with
professional perspectives - Preference for users and carers views to be
presented by themselves, as part of the strive
for a genuine partnership, social inclusion, and
empowerment.
5Conceptual models underpinning user and carer
involvement
- The Strengths Approach (Saleeby, 1992 Rapp,
1998) - Based on the assumption that users have strengths
and not only weaknesses - The move from a deficit model of users to a
strengths perspective has considerable
implications for the whole social work process,
including assessment, motivation enhancement,
aims and means of intervention, as well as to
risk taking.
6Conceptual models continued
- The Social Model of Disability (Campbell and
Oliver, 1996) - It argues that disabled people remain disabled
because society is not ready to remove the
visible and less visible barriers to their
involvement and contribution to our everyday
life - They may need specific types of support, but have
many qualities which are of value to the rest of
us and have the capacity to lead a good quality
of life with the right support.
7Conceptual models continued
- The Power (and power relationships) Dimension
- Involvement, equality and genuine partnership are
predicated on getting the power balance more
equal than has been the case in traditional
social work and that of other helping
professions - Attention to reducing the power of professionals
and enhancing that of users and carers is of
crucial importance - Genuine, non-tokenistic involvement on social
work educational programme has also the role of
modelling to students the possibility of a better
power balance between social workers, users and
carers.
8Specific measures for genuine partnership on our
programme have thus included
- Appointing users to co-ordinate the involvement
element of the programme - Contributing to the teaching on all modules as
guest speakers and consultants on the IBL module - Participation in our programme advisory groups
(PAGs) - Future steps participation in modules revision
full participation on the management board
9 10What does a label of schizophrenia mean to you as
a practising social worker?
- Some concerns over personal safety
- Concerned not to upset them
- A sense of fear
- People like you and me
- Could be anyone on the course
- Negative pictures from the media
- An unseen disability
- Someone who might have a carer
11What does a label mean to someone with a
disability?
- - NEGATIVE
- Stigma disempowering
- Reinforcement of the medical model
- Something to put a name to an illness
depersonalise it / disassociate from the self - POSITIVE
- I can achieve despite
- This is one reason why I feel / experience
- Can you understand some of my experiences?
12Labels in mental health
- Walker (2006) p. 6
- When we are talking about a persons thoughts
and feelings we are essentially talking about
their identity (which includes values, beliefs,
memories, fears, and desires). This is not like
something physically wrong with part of their
body. A disorder of thought or feeling is a
labeling of a persons identity. The labeling of
subjective experience feeds on itself and
perpetuates itself -
- Walker, M.T. (2006). The Social Construction of
Mental Illness and its Implications for the
Recovery Model. International Journal of
Psychosocial Rehabilitation. 10 (1), 71-87
13What do we want social workers to understand from
service users and carers?
- Learning together
- A sense of learning from each other
- A resource of knowledge and experience
- A strengths model not a deficit model
- To offer agreed support to enable them have
greater control over their lives - Resulting in
- A new power balance
- A new sense of respect
- A real understanding of the social model of
disability - Help service users and carers to prevent and
manage risk to self mainly, and - though rarely -
also to others.
14- Evaluation
- of a project implementing
- User and Carer Involvement
- in Social Work Education
- Roxana Anghel
15Research alongside the User Carer Involvement
Project at ARU
- Two-year one-cycle action research 2003-2005
- Aimed to
- collect the stakeholders views on the
appropriateness of the projects format, its
impact, and their suggestions for change - Involve all project stakeholders in developing
the project structure, content, and format - Undertaken by ARU researcher who initially was
not an insider to the project - Participants students, service users and carers
consultants in various capacities, BA staff, and
practice teachers - Variety of instruments of data collection
16Findings
- Students
- Feedback mostly positive, helped them empathise
listen see users as human beings become aware
of impact of social work on peoples lives
survivors not victims theory-practice
relationship - Suggestions a more balanced account from some
consultants group discussions in second semester
for revisiting and internalising the knowledge - BA staff
- Feedback mostly positive found added value in
consultant's input on aspects of social work
real life dimension, human perspective
counteracts stereotypes early introduction to
complexity cultural change that needs time and
effort committed to involvement - Suggestions wider user group better
preparation improved planning
17Findings - continued
- Consultants
- Feedback mostly positive contribution to
positive change of future social work practice
a great opportunity a privilege a right as
a user I have something to give - Suggestions better briefing and debriefing
better access, time allocation and attendance
mediating the dialogue consultant-students - Messages to students be human passionate for
the job emphatic good listener open minded
considerate and respectful - Practice Teachers
- Feedback difficult to implement requirements due
to lack of policy and training little
involvement in student selection some informal
involvement in final assessment no particular
techniques or tools - Suggestions protocol, guidance unified format
of student assessment across universities
increased support from university
18The change generated by the findings
- Systematically planned involvement covering all
BA full-time modules - Guidelines for staff for preparation and
debriefing of UCI consultants and students
(Protocol document) - More information and support to staff towards
including the involvement of users and carers
centrally within the culture of the social work
degree - Training offered to UCI consultants with a view
to increase their confidence in participating in
teaching - Ongoing support and close collaboration between
the UCI coordinator and staff and consultants
19The change generated by the findings - continued
- Informal and egalitarian structure to the PAG
meetings - Ensure language is accessible
- More reflection time for students on the messages
and the relevance of the input by the consultants
to their learning objectives - Wider range of users and carers involved
20Further action planned following stakeholder
feedback
- Closer collaboration with practice teachers,
their involvement being essential to ensure that - the knowledge accumulated from the UCI
consultants during modules and IBL is
successfully transferred into practice - students can witness examples of involvement of
users and carers within social care services - Open a dialogue with services offering placements
for collaboration towards helping students learn
in practice about user and carer involvement