Enabling undergraduates to put into practice learning to support emotional well-being for children and young people

In the UK policies such as the Children’s Plan 2008 -2020 through to Promoting the Emotional Health of Children and Young People (2010) identify that professionals such as teachers, youth workers, social workers and youth offending specialists, do not have the necessary underpinning knowledge to ade...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wendy Turner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre for Resilience & Socio-Emotional Health 2014-04-01
Series:International Journal of Emotional Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.um.edu.mt/__data/assets/pdf_file/0004/215158/v6i1p7.pdf
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spelling doaj-37ed46c0506b49b7bf512b96985a61ce2020-11-24T22:43:14ZengCentre for Resilience & Socio-Emotional HealthInternational Journal of Emotional Education2073-76292014-04-01617694Enabling undergraduates to put into practice learning to support emotional well-being for children and young people Wendy Turner0School of Education, University of Northampton, UK In the UK policies such as the Children’s Plan 2008 -2020 through to Promoting the Emotional Health of Children and Young People (2010) identify that professionals such as teachers, youth workers, social workers and youth offending specialists, do not have the necessary underpinning knowledge to adequately support children and young people’s emotional well-being. Further that these professionals fail to recognise when a child or young person may need additional help. These findings suggest that gaining knowledge and understanding of emotional well-being for children and young people is a key requirement for those working in this field. This paper is an evaluation of an initiative that saw a partnership of developing joint learning materials from expert emotional well-being organisations being delivered as part of an undergraduate award at a traditional Higher Educational (HE) Institution. The evaluation showed that the introduction of interactive, e-learning materials, supplemented with role play and scenario based learning and running concurrently alongside work experiences enabled students to acquire and apply knowledge and understanding of emotional well-being for children and young people to real situations, and thus bridged the ‘practice –theory gap’. http://www.um.edu.mt/__data/assets/pdf_file/0004/215158/v6i1p7.pdfemotional well-beingeducation and knowledgeapplied practicepracticetheory gap
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wendy Turner
spellingShingle Wendy Turner
Enabling undergraduates to put into practice learning to support emotional well-being for children and young people
International Journal of Emotional Education
emotional well-being
education and knowledge
applied practice
practicetheory gap
author_facet Wendy Turner
author_sort Wendy Turner
title Enabling undergraduates to put into practice learning to support emotional well-being for children and young people
title_short Enabling undergraduates to put into practice learning to support emotional well-being for children and young people
title_full Enabling undergraduates to put into practice learning to support emotional well-being for children and young people
title_fullStr Enabling undergraduates to put into practice learning to support emotional well-being for children and young people
title_full_unstemmed Enabling undergraduates to put into practice learning to support emotional well-being for children and young people
title_sort enabling undergraduates to put into practice learning to support emotional well-being for children and young people
publisher Centre for Resilience & Socio-Emotional Health
series International Journal of Emotional Education
issn 2073-7629
publishDate 2014-04-01
description In the UK policies such as the Children’s Plan 2008 -2020 through to Promoting the Emotional Health of Children and Young People (2010) identify that professionals such as teachers, youth workers, social workers and youth offending specialists, do not have the necessary underpinning knowledge to adequately support children and young people’s emotional well-being. Further that these professionals fail to recognise when a child or young person may need additional help. These findings suggest that gaining knowledge and understanding of emotional well-being for children and young people is a key requirement for those working in this field. This paper is an evaluation of an initiative that saw a partnership of developing joint learning materials from expert emotional well-being organisations being delivered as part of an undergraduate award at a traditional Higher Educational (HE) Institution. The evaluation showed that the introduction of interactive, e-learning materials, supplemented with role play and scenario based learning and running concurrently alongside work experiences enabled students to acquire and apply knowledge and understanding of emotional well-being for children and young people to real situations, and thus bridged the ‘practice –theory gap’.
topic emotional well-being
education and knowledge
applied practice
practicetheory gap
url http://www.um.edu.mt/__data/assets/pdf_file/0004/215158/v6i1p7.pdf
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