Teaching without being taught how: social work practice faculty voices

Social work practice faculty have an important role in socializing MSW students to the field and practice of social work. This study, based on interviews with 15 faculty teaching an advanced clinical practice course in the United States, examines how faculty conceptualize teaching and learning. Facu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social work education 2020-02, Vol.39 (2), p.145-159
1. Verfasser: Varghese, Rani
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description Social work practice faculty have an important role in socializing MSW students to the field and practice of social work. This study, based on interviews with 15 faculty teaching an advanced clinical practice course in the United States, examines how faculty conceptualize teaching and learning. Faculty were asked about the theories or frameworks that guided their teaching, their own journeys to teaching and the resources that support their teaching. The study found that participants drew largely on their own experiences as student learners and social work practitioners and did not have much formal training in teaching and student learning. Furthermore, while half of the participants were able to identify a learning theory that guided their teaching, the other half were not. Finally, while participants articulated the need for support regarding their own teaching, many of the schools did not have formal faculty development opportunities. The paper ends with recommendations for supporting current and new faculty regarding teaching and student learning.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Education Source
subjects Clinical medicine
Clinical training
College faculty
Graduate students
Learning
learning theory
Professional development
Professional practice
Professional training
Scholarship of teaching and learning
Social work
Social work education
social work education
pedagogy
curriculum
social work practice
Social workers
Teaching
title Teaching without being taught how: social work practice faculty voices
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