Leads: Professor Robin Miller, Ms Sharanya Nama Mahesh (Social Care)
Dates: February 2021 – January 2022
Background:
An important recent development within social care has been a greater emphasis on building on the strengths of individuals and families, and the assets within their communities. This reflects a recognition that whilst professional expertise and support can play an important role, wellbeing of children and adults is built on personal skills, capabilities and interests, informal networks and personal resilience. Demonstrating ‘strength-based practice’ with individuals and families requires professionals to move away from traditional models which emphasised what people could not do and how such deficits could be met by professionals, and instead to work in partnership with children, adults and families to understand their aspirations and what would support them to achieve these.
A key enabler of strength-based practice is the leadership that social workers experience in their work. The University of Birmingham and the Social Care Institute for Excellence have developed a leadership programme to support practice leaders within social work and social care to demonstrate the necessary leadership through engaging with academic insights, critically reflecting on their own leadership, and developing a community of practice with their peers.
Policy and Practice Partners:
Social Care Institute for Excellence.
Co-Funding Partners:
The West Midlands Teaching Partnership.
Aims and Objectives:
This project will evaluate the programme in relation to the following aspects – the experience of participants of engaging with the learning materials and activities, the learning of participants in relation to theories and research of leadership, the leadership behaviours that participants are able to demonstrate, and the impact of improvement projects that they complete during the programme.
Methods:
The evaluation will be mixed methods and draw on the following data – self-assessments by participants at the beginning and the end of the programme of their leadership behaviours, qualitative interviews with participants and their organisational sponsors, reflective exercises which participants complete throughout the programme, and a focus group with the programme facilitators.
Main results:
The design and delivery of the program provided theory informed opportunities for reflection, improving the knowledge, skills, and leadership behaviors of participants.
Through theoretical and practical opportunities for reflection, participants were more confident in claiming a leadership identity and recognizing how to reflect their social work values within their leadership.
Conclusions:
Greater emphasis in social work education and by professional bodies on the nature of social work leadership would further strengthen its legitimacy and contribution.
Implications for Implementation:
Opportunities to engage with relevant content, to learn with and from peers in other settings, and to apply learning within their local contexts can be provided effectively and at relatively low cost through virtual programs.
Underpinning these with strengths-based principles appears to have resonance with social work leaders due to familiarity and support for their core values and intent.
There is a rationale for leadership being a more explicit element of social work competencies.
Output:
Mahesh S, Miller R. Building on strengths to develop the leadership of social workers. Social Work Education. 2024; 1-19.