Retaining experienced social workers
Career pathways are important for ongoing professional development and retention.
Career pathways which offer opportunities for specialism, generativity and mobility are important for ongoing professional development and retention.
Dr Laura Cook talks about the importance of ongoing development opportunities for experienced social workers, which are distinct from routes into management, and the role that these can play in retention.
Talking Points
This video looks at:
- Opportunities to continue to develop professional identity through specialism, mobility and generativity are important to experienced social workers.
Length: 9 minutes
Reflective questions
Consider examples from your own organisations and practice:
- What opportunities for specialism, mobility and generativity are available to your experienced social workers?
- How might you embed these three elements into your existing progression pathways/workforce development programmes?
Resources mentioned in this video
- Cook, L., Carder, S. and Zschlomler, D. (2022) Retaining and supporting experienced social workers in child protection, University of East Anglia.
Professional Standards
PQS:KSS - Organisational context | Developing excellent practitioners | Developing excellent practitioners | Organisational context | Developing confident and capable social workers