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 Undergraduate Course: Community Work (EDUA10121)
Course Outline
| School | Moray House School of Education and Sport | College | College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences |  
| Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 10 (Year 3 Undergraduate) | Availability | Not available to visiting students |  
| SCQF Credits | 20 | ECTS Credits | 10 |  
 
| Summary | This course is particularly concerned with the current policy context as it constructs and constrains the community work task.  It aims to locate and analyse those policy discourses which inform the context of practice and to identify what spaces exist between competing discourses and demands in which to develop a critical, competent and coherent community work practice. |  
| Course description | This course will explore the changing context of professional practice, and examine the implications of key policy discourses.  It will consider the complex relationship between politics, policy and practice in relation to specific practice contexts.  It will explore the changing role of the professional practitioner. |  
Course Delivery Information
| Not being delivered |  
Learning Outcomes 
| On completion of this course, the student will be able to: 
        Identify relevant policy developmentsCritically identify, define, conceptualise and analyse complex problems and issuesCritically review the contradictory relationship between politics, policy and practiceArticulate potential areas of 'relative autonomy' in professional practiceIdentify possibilities and problems for practice in the current policy context |  
Reading List 
| Key Reading Texts 
 ¿The public sphere as dilemmatic space¿ an extract from Hoggett, P, Mayo, M and Miller, C (2008) The Dilemmas of Development Work: Ethical Challenges in Regeneration, Policy Press, Bristol. [Available on Learn]
 
 Cornwall, A (2008) ¿Unpacking ¿participation¿: models, meanings and practices, Community Development Journal, 43 (3).
 
 Harrison, (2013) ¿Bouncing back? Recession, resilience and everyday lives¿, Critical Social Policy 33 (1) 97-113.
 
 Wallace, A (2009) ¿Governance at a distance?  The turn to the local in UK social policy¿, in Rummery, K, Greener, I and Holden, I (eds) Social Policy Review 21, Policy Press.
 
 Fraser, G (2012) ¿Community development and the politics of local government¿, Concept 3(3) 2012.
 
 Jupp, E (2012) ¿Rethinking local activism: ¿cultivating the capacities¿ of neighbourhood organising¿, Urban Studies, 49 (14) pp. 3027-3044.
 
 Meade, R and Shaw, M (2011) ¿Community development and the arts: Sustaining the democratic imagination in lean and mean times¿, Journal of Arts & Communities, 2(1).
 
 Shaw, M and Crowther, J (2013 forthcoming) Adult education, community development and democracy: renegotiating the terms of engagement¿, Community Development Journal.
 
 Stanistreet, P (2013) ¿Things we didn¿t learn at school¿, Adults Learning, Winter 2012.
 
 Quinn, N and Knifton, L (2012) ¿Positive Mental Attitudes: how community development principles have shaped a ten-year mental health inequalities programme in Scotland¿, Community Development Journal, 47 (4).
 
 Toomey, A. H (2011) ¿Empowerment and disempowerment in community development practice: eight roles practitioners play¿, Community Development Journal, 46(2) pp. 181-195.
 
 Journals
 
 
 Journals
 Community Development Journal
 Concept (available free at  http://concept.lib.ed.ac.uk/
 Policy & Politics
 Critical Social Policy
 Journal of Social Policy
 
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Additional Information
| Graduate Attributes and Skills | Personal and Intellectual Autonomy Work both independently and collaboratively in academic context
 Make critical connections between theory and practice
 Communication
 Recognise and value communication as a tool for negotiating and creating new understandings.
 Personal Effectiveness
 Be reflective and reflexive in relation to intellectual inquiry and professional practice
 
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| Additional Class Delivery Information | Students will engage in lectures and tutor led tutorials via the hybrid model incorporating either on campus or online delivery. |  
| Keywords | community   policy   practice |  
Contacts 
| Course organiser | Ms Margaret Petrie Tel: (0131 6)51 4788
 Email: Margaret.Petrie@ed.ac.uk
 | Course secretary | Mrs Lesley Spencer Tel: (0131 6)51 6373
 Email: Lesley.Spencer@ed.ac.uk
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