There is always an exception that
proves the rule. When sleeping, the human body naturally uses about 90 minute sleep cycles. For me I
usually have 4 or 5 sleep cycles depending on what time I go to bed – I wake up
at 05.00 every day. If you happen to wake up for any reason during one of
these cycles you are going to feel extremely tired. Strangely although I break
all the 'sensible rules' about getting a good night’s sleep, (don't drink
caffeine 6 hours before going to bed; don't watch TV or use your phone or
computer as the white light throws off your circadian rhythm sleeping; and no
more than 1 or 2 drinks of alcohol) usually I have no problem going off to sleep
and waking up refreshed in the morning.
Possible futures again featured
in my thinking last week. Personal futures for sure, but more often it was the
futures of others that captured my imagination. Tomorrow, over 1000 new students
will join the School, ready to start their journey towards a higher education
qualification. Their futures will be shaped by their own efforts and the
changing world they find themselves in. It’s an exciting time for all involved
in each of these personal journeys of hope and fulfilment.
Many of these students will be
undertaking a degree that leads to a qualification for professional practice.
The nature and scope of professional practice in health and social care is also rapidly
changing. The Panorama programme featured a number of examples of how new
technologies are changing health care treatments and the prevention of disease
and accidents. Such changes can bring with them real challenges as to what we
imagine or believe might be possible. Equally, as educationalists, it can be a
real challenge to think differently about how we might prepare people for the
changing nature of professional practice.
As a School we have been very
successful in a number of areas. Our Counselling and Psychotherapy team
recognised the changing nature of their world 4 years ago and developed and
produced a startling different programme that prepares students to start
practice as a qualified professional from the day they finish the course rather
than having to gain additional hours of supervised practice first. Over the
last 3 years the programme has grown its numbers from 50 students to over a 100
a year.
Likewise, in 2010, our Social Work
colleagues took the decision to pilot a new way of preparing individuals for
social work practice. This was the Step Up to Social Work programme, a rather controversial
approach that in an 18 month programme produced qualified social workers. Its now a 14 month programme, but it is not a programme for everyone wishing to become a social worker (you need to have
a 1st class or 2:1 first degree). However, the programme has been very successful. We
will start Step Up 4 in January 2016, and since 2010, we have taken 240
students through the programme. In the same period we have taken 600 students
through the more traditional undergraduate social work programme, and nearly 800 through the
traditional postgraduate route.
And as I mentioned in last week
blog post (and thanks to all those of you who have read the blog and sent your
comments), the School is currently part of the national discussion on what the shape
of caring, and nurse education, might look like in the near future. You can catch up on the debate here. What is clear in the North West of the UK is that
there is a great desire to bring many of these ideas forward as soon as
possible. The various regional representations of the Department of Health
in all its elements have long looked to the North for innovation and best
practice.
In the School I think that
equally there is the desire to develop more flexible approaches for nursing
programmes and we have a golden opportunity to do so with the support of colleagues
in practice, the NMC and our commissioners. I am hoping that in 5 or even 10 years’
time someone, perhaps someone who can’t sleep, will watch a programme of how
nurse education has evolved and developed and recognise the exponential change brought
about here in Greater Manchester, which provided the vanguard for others to
follow.
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