Advances in Social Work (Sep 2020)

Jumpstarting Cross-Discipline Collaboration in Undergraduate Social Work Education

  • Cyndi Amato,
  • Shelley Cohen Konrad,
  • Lane W. Clarke,
  • Caryn Husman,
  • Audrey Bartholomew,
  • Caroline Beals

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18060/23654
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 2
pp. 473 – 496

Abstract

Read online

This paper examines the integration of undergraduate teacher education students into interprofessional activities with social work and pre-occupational therapy undergraduates. Like health professionals, school-based professionals work across disciplines daily and come together for critical decision-making on behalf of vulnerable and special needs students. Although evidenced-based pedagogy in interprofessional education (IPE) has become common in graduate and professional health education, less is known about its implementation in undergraduate education and with non-health-related disciplines. This article describes a 2-year interprofessional undergraduate simulation project with social work, teacher education, and pre-occupational studies students working prospectively in a K-12 school setting. Survey data found that students gained confidence in their disciplinary roles as well as in their abilities to communicate and collaborate effectively as a result of participation in the school-based simulation and related activities. The project highlighted the benefits of situating theory-driven undergraduate interprofessional learning in settings beyond healthcare and the need for developing assessment tools inclusive of undergraduates and relevant to a range of workforce environments.

Keywords