Title

Becoming Competent to Teach Competence: Learning and Teaching Relational Process

Department/School

Social Work

Date of this version

2018

Document Type

Article

Keywords

dialogical analysis, family therapy, competence, constructivist pedagogy, experiential learning

Abstract

Though never comfortable with the term competency, I reluctantly accepted it as a way to teach noticing and attending to relational process (NARP) for couple and family social work practice. Didactic training combined with experiential activities of video-recorded role-play and audio-recorded feedback comprised my signature strategy. Although this teaching approach seemed successful, I wrestled theoretically with competency, and my ideas morphed through ongoing practice, teaching, and research experiences. I eventually concluded that NARP was not a single competency, but was best characterized as “ways of being” as a social work practitioner; I consequently worked to become more articulate and transparent in the classroom, and more intentional in practice. Informed by constructivist pedagogy, relational ontology, and dialogical analysis, I use the following reflection to immerse myself in an ongoing dialogue to understand how my own and students’ unique discourses shape NARP.

Volume

24

Issue

3

Published in

Reflections: Narratives of Professional Helping

Citation/Other Information

Peterson, L. T. (2018). Becoming competent to teach competence: Learning and teaching relational process. Reflections: Narratives of Professional Helping, 24(3), 17-27.

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