Social Work Practice: Mental Health (SCWK90038)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
Overview
Availability | September |
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Fees | Look up fees |
This subject focuses on social work practice in the mental health field and examines the variety of practice perspectives that inform mental health service delivery in Australia. Topics covered include the nature of mental illness and how consumers, their relatives and friends experience it, and contemporary approaches to treatment and recovery. Also, examined are the national and state policy context, how services are organised and the particular contributions of social work practitioners within the different settings that they operate. There is a focus on psychosocial understandings of mental health and the importance of lived experience perspectives. Students will develop skills in psychosocial and risk assessments, approaches to trauma-informed practice, and working with complex forms of distress. The elective will utilise guest speakers to provide practitioner and consumers perspectives.
Intended learning outcomes
Knowledge
On completion of the subject, students should be able to:
- Identify and describe competing practice perspectives and evidence bases, that inform social work practice in mental health settings;
- Describe different features of the consumer/lived experience perspective and how this can inform practice in mental health settings; and
- Identify and critique concepts of risk and risk management involved with mental health practice.
Skills
On completion of the subject, students should be able to:
- Analyse how social work theory and skills can be applied in mental health settings;
- Demonstrate a capacity to use psychosocial approaches to assessment that consider risk and risk management;
- Critically apply the consumer/lived experience perspective to decision making in mental health settings.
Application of Knowledge and Skills
On completion of the subject, students should be able to:
- Critically evaluate issues in mental health, by synthesizing and analysing the evidence for a variety of practice perspectives, risk perspectives, social work perspectives, and lived experience perspectives and applying them to a range of practice settings.
Generic skills
On completion of this subject students should be able to:
- critically analyse texts and practices;
- link theory to practice;
- competently communicate in ways relevant to both academic and practice contexts;
- undertake independent research.
Last updated: 4 March 2025