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Newly available in paperback, this original and informative volume
outlines a new, well-designed reflective teaching and learning
model that can be used with single- or multi-disciplinary groups of
students and professionals. It offers an overview of the origins of
the different theories of reflection and explains how different
levels of reflection can be understood and incorporated into
everyday teaching and training. Outlining specific teaching and
learning techniques to be used in training situations, it also
includes examples of how these techniques have been successfully
used with groups of professionals from health and social care
areas. This edition features a substantive new preface, bringing
the book up to date with recent developments in the field. It is a
well-researched guide to both the theory and the practice of
reflection, and it also offers those who teach and train
professionals a clearly delineated reflective model for use in the
classroom or professional training environment.
This publication covers all major aspects of social policy in
relation to disability in contemporary Ireland. New approaches to
policy making, influenced by concepts of rights, partnership and
integration, have led to major changes in service provision and
legislation affecting people with disabilities. These developments
are fully discussed in chapters on education and employment
policies, health services, social security, access and independent
living, gender, ethnicity, poverty, ageing, the mixed economy of
welfare and disability, the emerging rights perspective for
disabled people, and the legislation underpinning service
provision. The effect of European legislation is fully covered, and
comparisons are made with provision in other countries and in
Northern Ireland.
A new textbook which draws together developments in mental health
policy in recent years and identifies the challenges posed by
changes in Irish society. Topics covered include international
trends, health promotion, children, adolescence, women, ethnic
minorities, suicide, the homeless, crime, the workplace and ageing.
Chapters include an historical overview followed by a discussion of
international data, current policy and likely developments and
future challenges Mental Health and Social Policy in Ireland is
part of the University College Dublin Press series of social policy
texts, which include Contemporary Irish Social Policy (1999), Irish
Social Policy in Context (1999), Disability and Social Policy in
Ireland (2003) and Theorising Irish Social Policy (2004).
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