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The sustainability of Egan’s Skilled Helper Model in students’ social work practice

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-29, 10:14 authored by Sally RiggallSally Riggall

This paper investigates the nature of students’ learning of the Egan Skilled Helper model in enabling them to develop collaborative communication skills which place service-users at the centre of decision making. The paper is a follow-up to an earlier paper which found that the Egan model was helpful to students as a communication and problem management tool and that they had transferred their learning into practice. The current study involves seven students from the first study and examines whether their knowledge and skills from learning the model in year one have been sustained two years later during their third year practice placement. A key finding is that participants were continuing to use most stages of the model (with the exception of challenging skills) with service-users in a variety of settings. Further findings are that the model is still useful in situations where goals are set by social workers rather than by service-users; and that it is the utilisation of role-play when learning the model which most embeds skills. The implications of these findings for skills training are discussed together with suggestions for further focus.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Health and Social Care (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Social Work Practice

Volume

31

Issue

1

Pages/Article Number

81-93

Publisher

Taylor & Francis (Routledge) for Group for the Advancement of Psychodynamics and Psychotherapy in Social Work (GAPS)

ISSN

0265-0533

eISSN

1465-3885

Date Submitted

2015-09-21

Date Accepted

2015-08-11

Date of First Publication

2015-09-15

Date of Final Publication

2016-01-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2015-09-21

ePrints ID

18801

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