Skip navigation

SCIE helps students through the information blizzard

SCIE recognises that the people studying social work today will help to shape the future of social care tomorrow.

SCIE is committed to workforce development and supporting a qualified and well trained workforce. This means supporting students on the journey throughout their social work career from starting their studies, to newly qualified social worker and beyond.

There is a blizzard of information out there and time is precious for both educator and learner, so SCIE offers free resources to support teaching and learning.

The autumn 2009 student campaign will reach all social work degree students, promoting SCIE's expanding range of innovative knowledge resources in print, web-based and e-learning formats.

For all the latest information in social care students can look to SCIE as a one stop shop: www.scie.org.uk

Newly qualified social worker Karen Burrell found SCIE’s resources invaluable throughout her studies, "For every module in the social work degree there was a SCIE resource that helped me gain a better understanding of the subject."

social care institute for excellence

 

Print | Back | Forward to a friend »

Have your say


You can leave comments on the article you've just read here. If you have a question for the GSCC please contact us rather than posting it here.



* Compulsory fields
† Responses may be edited
Text Size: A A A

What do you think?

Have you ever faced a situation where you or a colleague risked breaching professional boundaries*?

*A boundary between what is acceptable and unacceptable for a professional both at work and outside work.



What do you think?

If you answered yes, which of the following three options most closely captures what you did?



Newsletter

Latest Issue - December 2011

 

E-Newsletter View E-Newsletter

PDF Download PDF

Download Adobe Reader ®

On the forum now

Restorative Justice: Should victims meet their offenders?

 

Ethical dilemma

 

Asylum Seekers & Mental Health

 

Professional Boundaries guidance launched
GSCC Chief Executive Penny Thompson blogs about the launch of our new professional boundaries guidance for social workers.

© Copyright 2012