Community Care Community Care Social Work News & Social Care Jobs
Menu
  • Jobs/Careers
    • Jobs
    • Employer Profiles
    • Workforce Insights
    • Podcasts
    • Careers Zone
    ▼
  • Learning
    • Community Care Inform Adults
    • Community Care Inform Children
    ▼
  • Events
    • Masterclasses
    • Webinars
    • Community Care Live
    ▼
  • E-newsletters
  • News
    • Adults
    • Children
    • Social work leaders
    • Workforce
    • Choose Social Work
    • Write for Community Care
    ▼
  • Network
    • The Social Work Community
    ▼
  • Search
  • ID
    Community Care
    • Menu
    • Jobs/Careers
      • Jobs
      • Employer Profiles
      • Workforce Insights
      • Podcasts
      • Careers Zone
    • Learning
      • Community Care Inform Adults
      • Community Care Inform Children
    • Events
      • Masterclasses
      • Webinars
      • Community Care Live
    • E-newsletters
    • News
      • Adults
      • Children
      • Social work leaders
      • Workforce
      • Choose Social Work
      • Write for Community Care
    • Network
      • The Social Work Community
    • Search
      • Register
      • Login
      Jobs Live Inform

      Social work managers and leaders will have to prove they ensure social worker wellbeing

      Knowledge about legislation and case law also added to chief social worker’s statements of knowledge and skills

      By Joanna Silman on November 19, 2015 in Careers, CPD, Social care leaders, Workforce

      Isabelle Trowler has published the final list of standards that assistant directors and those supervising children’s social workers will need to meet, under plans to accredit the workforce.

      It follows a consultation period on the standards, developed by the KPMG-led consortium which won a government contract to build an assessment and accreditation system for child and family social workers at three levels.

      Professional and personal support

      Key changes that have been made to the draft statements, as a result of the consultation, include a greater focus on knowledge of legislation and case law for both supervisors and leaders and a requirement for leaders to provide sufficient professional and personal support to ensure the wellbeing of practitioners. There is also stronger emphasis on the wellbeing of children in public care.

      In addition to the final statements, Trowler also outlined the next steps for accreditation which include:

      • Consideration of further knowledge and skills statements for specialist areas of practice such as planning permanent care options.
      • Guidance on the assessment and accreditation process will be published early next year for consultation. This will include asking the sector whether the tests should be made mandatory.
      • Exploring the idea of accreditation for leaders, as well as supervisors, of adult social work.

      The standards for the first level – Approved Child and Family Practitioner status, for those in frontline roles – were published last November and a four stage assessment process is being developed.

      Different assessment processes

      The Department for Education expects that social workers seeking practice supervisor status, the second level, will need to pass the same four stages – employer endorsement, online tests of knowledge, critical reasoning and decision-making, and observation of practice in a simulated environment.

      However, practice leaders, who will usually be assistant directors of children’s social care or directors of family services, are likely to have to go through a continuous assessment process instead.

      Implementation guidance

      The government said any plans on implementing accreditation would “take into account workforce pressures and other workforce implications”.

      As part of the consultation, the social workers, local authorities and other bodies who responded, asked for clarity on how the statuses would relate to existing management structures and roles such as principal social worker and independent reviewing officer. The government said this would also be included in the forthcoming guidance but it would be “mindful of the need not to stifle structural innovation in local authorities”.

      In response to queries about how the new statements fit in with other frameworks, the government said it was not its intention to replace the professional capabilities framework.

      “A number of general social work standards and guidance documents do exist; these new statements, in contrast, are dedicated to practice supervisors and practice leaders in the child and family social work setting, and so have not been amended to include other frameworks.”

      However, the government said the statements complemented the HCPC professional standards and the regulatory body would be taking them into account when it reviews its standards of proficiency.

      More from Community Care

      Related articles:

      Working in Milton Keynes children’s social care teams
      Shout out to our first social work hero

      One Response to Social work managers and leaders will have to prove they ensure social worker wellbeing

      1. Wandjana November 25, 2015 at 1:00 pm #

        If our local LA is anything to go by, applying similiar standards to Adult Social Care should be done asap .

      Job of the week

      Bournemouth Christchurch and Poole Council logo

      Children’s Social Workers – Level 2/3 – Children & Families First

      Employer Profiles

      • Bournemouth beach Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole
      • Hampshire County Council
      • A picture of an Oxford college quad Oxfordshire County Council
      • Two colleagues talking South Gloucestershire Council
      • Wokingham town centre image Wokingham Borough Council

      Workforce Insights

      • Would you move from the city to work in a more rural setting?
      • Webinar: building a practice framework with the influence of practitioner voice
      • Photo: Microgen/ Adobe ‘They don’t have to retell their story’: building long-lasting relationships with children and young people
      • Podcast: returning to social work after becoming a first-time parent
      • How managers are inspiring social workers to progress in their careers
      • Hand putting wooden cube block on blue background with word CAREER and copy space for your text. Business career planning growth to success concept Workforce Insights – showcasing a selection of the sector’s top recruiters

      Featured jobs

      Sign up for our social work emails

      More from Community Care

      • Network

        The networking platform for social workers


        Connect with peers
      • Jobs

        The latest job opportunities within the social work sector

        Search for jobs
      • Events

        The largest free to attend event for the social work sector

        Register now
      • Learn

        The online learning and practice resource for social workers

        Find out more

      Connect with us

      • facebookFacebook
      • XX
      • LinkedInLinkedIn
      • InstagramInstagram

      Topics

      • Adults
      • Children
      • Workforce
      • Social work leadership

      More information

      • About us
      • Contact us
      • Write for Community Care
      • Accessibility
      • Advertise with us
      • Privacy
      • Terms & conditions
      • Cookies
      Mark Allen Group
      © MA Education 2025. St Jude's Church, Dulwich Road, Herne Hill, London SE24 0PB, a company registered in England and Wales no. 04002826. MA Education is part of the Mark Allen Group. All Rights Reserved