Module Code
SWK8116
The aim of the Postgraduate Certificate in Advanced Social Work with Children, Young People and Families is to enable child and family social work practitioners working in a range of social care settings in both the statutory and voluntary sectors, to develop advanced knowledge and skills to enhance their practice within their current work setting. Through a mixture of lectures, small group teaching, skills workshops and practice related assessment methods, the programme emphasises the translation of learning into effective practice through a clear focus on critical thinking and skills development linked to the student’s practice context. Teaching in Year 1 will enable students to critically evaluate theoretical perspectives and research evidence in relation to child development, the factors that affect parenting capacity, family dynamics and relationships, the aetiology of child maltreatment, and the environmental and structural issues that contribute to child and family wellbeing. Students will develop their understanding of how to effectively talk to children and parents about their experiences, as well as develop their engagement and relationship building skills through the use of the use of mapping techniques such as genograms, ecomaps, timelines. They will also have the opportunity to develop their knowledge and skills in supporting children, young people, and families at all stages of the social care pathway including those living at home with parents and those in foster, kinship, adoptive and residential care.
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Course content
All modules will be taught face to face, unless Health and Safety conditions preclude it. All modules will be worth 20 CAT points with 3 modules running across the academic year. Module 1 will run 1 day per week over 6 weeks in the autumn. Module 2 will be 2-day teaching blocks spread over 12 weeks across the academic year, and module 3 will be 1 day per week over 6 weeks in the spring semester. Those who successfully complete the PG Certificate may wish to progress to the PG Diploma and/or MSc.
SSESW
SSESW
l.bunting@qub.ac.uk
Learning opportunities available with this course are outlined below:
This programme provides knowledge and skills which
are highly valued in both child and adult services across health and social care.
Assessments associated with this programme are outlined below:
The School is situated across a suite of three buildings in Belfast's Queen's Quarter. We provide student and staff common rooms, computer suites and designated study spaces.
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The information below is intended as an example only, featuring module details for the current year of study (2025/26). Modules are reviewed on an annual basis and may be subject to future changes – revised details will be published through Programme Specifications ahead of each academic year.
This module aims to provide an advanced grounding in the core issues
that affect children, parents and families in contact with children social
care at different stages and levels of intervention. It will cover key policy
developments and trends in children’s social care as well as key theories
and research evidence relating to the core domains of the
Understanding the Needs of Children in Northern Ireland (UNOCINI)
assessment framework which cover child development and needs,
parent’s capacity to meet their child’s needs and
community/environmental factors.
The module will enable candidates to:
1. Understand the current policy and practice context of
children’s social care in NI and recent trends in family
contact with child and family social work.
2. Understand international and national context of family
support provision, developments with NI and associated
skills
3. Understand and critically evaluate theoretical perspectives
and research evidence in relation:
- child development and the impact of adversity and
maltreatment.
- The domains of parenting capacity and the factors that
affect family dynamics and relationships, in particular
the aetiology of child maltreatment.
- the wider environmental factors that contribute to child
and family wellbeing, with an emphasis on poverty and
deprivation and the residential care environment.
4. Demonstrate capacity to systematically apply relevant
legislation/policy, theories and research to current work
and agency setting
5. Demonstrate ability to reflect on and critically evaluate own
practice judgements and decision making in the context of
complexity, risk, uncertainty, conflict and/or contradiction
6. Critically reflect on both their own and agency practices to
evaluate the effectiveness of planning and intervention with
children and their families/carers
1. Apply theory and research to current practice context
2. Critically reflect on and evaluate own assessment, planning
and decision-making skills
3. Be accountable for own work and demonstrate a capacity to
plan for and respond to change
4. Develop confidence in and understanding of own
professional role
Coursework
100%
Examination
0%
Practical
0%
20
SWK8116
Autumn
6 weeks
This module aims to develop practitioners’ knowledge and skills in
supporting children, young people, and families at all stages of the
social care pathway including those living at home with parents and
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those in foster, kinship, adoptive and residential care. It will focus on
theoretical and practice perspectives on parenting and caregiving
across family and alternative care systems. It will introduce
practitioners to the Northern Ireland Framework for Integrated
Therapeutic Care (NIFITC) attachment, trauma-informed, systemic,
and rights-based approaches to care and treatment for looked after
children. Opportunities for skills development will be provided through
skills workshops.
Proposed Content:
• Understanding family journeys through social care pathways
• International and national models of looked after care provision
• NI legislation and policy context (including human and children’s
rights)
• Theoretical perspectives – the social construction of families
• Key trends, issues, and research re: foster care kinship care,
residential childcare, adoption and secure care
• Children and young people’s perspectives on care (including
subjective wellbeing)
• Assessing and enhancing parenting in the context of contact/family
time
• Effective practice for reintegrating children home from care
• Parenting and caring for children who have experienced trauma
• Assessing and enhancing parenting capacity for care-experienced
parents
• The NIFITC - core knowledge, values, and skills
• The role of the social worker in the corporate family
• Service user perspectives
• Skills workshops
On completion of the module students should have developed the
following range of knowledge applicable to supporting children, young
people, and families at various of the social care pathway, and be able
to apply this knowledge to their practice:
1. The legislative, policy and practice context for working with
Looked After children and their families.
2. Assessing and enhancing parenting capacity at specific stages
of the social care journey, including contact/family time for
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Looked After Children, and reintegration of children home from
care.
3. Parenting and caregiving for children who have experienced
trauma.
4. Theoretical perspectives and international research evidence in
relation to foster care kinship care, residential childcare,
adoption, and secure care.
5. Application of the NIFITC to support children who are or have
been placed in out-of-home care and their families.
6. Literature documenting the perspectives of care-experienced
children and young people.
By completing the module students should develop and demonstrate
the following skills:
1. The ability to apply relevant legislation, policy, theory and
research to their practice with children and families.
2. The ability to apply relevant practice frameworks to assess and
meet the needs of children and families across various stages of
the social care pathway.
3. The ability to analyse and critically evaluate their own practice to
enhance parenting and/or caregiving and meet children’s needs.
4. The ability to elicit and critically reflect upon the perspectives of
parents and/or caregivers.
This module will meet the following PiP Consolidation
Requirements:
3. Demonstrate consistent and sustained sound judgement and
decision making in the context of complexity, risk, uncertainty, conflict
and/or contradiction.
4. Systematically apply knowledge and understanding of service user
and carers’ issues to actively contribute to social support strategies that
promote choice, independence and empowerment and which involve
service users and carers (where appropriate).
Coursework
100%
Examination
0%
Practical
0%
20
SWK8118
Spring
6 weeks
This module aims to develop practitioner skills in engaging and building
relationships with children and families across the social care pathway.
It will cover the core principles, concepts, and skills of Systemic
practice, making the connections with policy and practice
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developments across children’s social care in the UK. Module content
will cover a range of skills and mapping techniques to facilitate effective
communication, assessment and early intervention with children,
parents, and families. It will also provide frameworks to help students
pay attention to wider societal and environmental factors that impact
children and family’s lives including issues of diversity and inequality.
Students will also gain experience of the benefits of reflective and
reflexive practice, increasing self-awareness and the importance for
workforce wellbeing.
Content
• An introduction to core systemic principles, concepts, and skills
• Connecting Systemic Practice with policy and practice
developments across child and family social work
• Using Systemic concepts to help consider the lives of multi-stressed families – family life cycle, family scripts, family
structure, intergenerational patterns, and transitions
• An introduction to systemic frameworks to consider diversity and
inequality in social work assessment and intervention (e.g.
poverty, race, religion, culture, sexuality, sexual identity, illness
and disability etc.).
• An introduction to reflective practice and self-reflexivity
• Understanding and working with power dynamics within families
and across the system of care
Skills development:
- engagement and relationship building in social care contexts
- the use of mapping techniques to facilitate engagement,
assessment and intervention with children, young people,
parents, and families (genograms, ecomaps, timelines)
- understanding and talking about children’s experiences
- considering the benefits and limitations of individual and joint
parent/family-child work
- reflective and reflexive practice
- Personal and professional development
The module will enable candidates to:
1. A basic understanding of systemic theories and principles
underpinning systemic practice with families and organisations.
2. A knowledge and awareness of the influence of the wider social
context (including gender, race, age, ability, culture, education,
sexuality) on self and clients, with an ability to consider how
inequalities and power differentials impact on people’s lives and
systemic practices.
3. A knowledge of the AFT code of ethics and an ability to use
ethical decision making, especially in relation to safeguarding,
confidentiality and consent.
4. An understanding of the practice skills and knowledge required to
convene a systemic interview, and to make a good therapeutic
relationship.
5. The skills to construct a genogram in a way that leads to better
understanding the complexities of family relationships, strengths
and vulnerabilities.
6. An ability to describe and critique the concept of the family life
cycle perspective and its application to different family forms.
7. An ability to identify and work with individual and family strengths.
8. An ability to begin to consider their own personal family and
cultural experiences from a systemic perspective, and to explore
how these influence their professional practice.
9. An ability to reflect on their own learning and their positioning in
their professional system.
• Use systemic ideas to think about and contribute to their current
practice.
• Show an awareness and an ability to describe working in a way
that is ethical and takes account of difference and power.
• Apply a systemic perspective to an assessment of the problem
and the need for family work, understanding the limitations of the
method and limits of their own expertise.
• Use basic interventions including verbal and non-verbal methods
to improve communication and help families to achieve their
goals.
• Construct a genogram with clients, using this to identify patterns
of relationship, historical influences and stressors on the family,
and to consider how these may impact on the problem/difficulty
referred.
• Identify and consider how their own personal family experiences,
beliefs and assumptions influence the work undertaken.
Coursework
100%
Examination
0%
Practical
0%
20
SWK8117
Full Year
12 weeks
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Course content
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Entry requirements
Applicants should normally hold a second-class honours degree or higher. Where this academic requirement is not met, they must satisfy the programme lead that their experience and qualifications equip them to undertake postgraduate study through a written assignment.
Applicants must also possess a social work qualification recognised by the Northern Ireland Social Care Council (NISCC) and be registered with the Council.
Applicants should have completed their assessed year in employment (AYE).
All applicants must be currently engaged for at least 12 hours per week in a children’s social care setting in a capacity in which core social work values underpin their practice with service users or carers.
Applicants must be enrolled on the PiP Consolidation or Specialist Award on the NISCC portal.
Applicants are advised to apply as early as possible. In the event that any programme receives a high number of applications, the University reserves the right to close the application portal prior to the deadline stated on course finder. Notifications to this effect will appear on the application portal against the programme application page.
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Evidence of an IELTS* score of 6.5, with not less than 5.5 in any component, or an equivalent qualification acceptable to the University is required. *Taken within the last 2 years.
International students wishing to apply to Queen's University Belfast (and for whom English is not their first language), must be able to demonstrate their proficiency in English in order to benefit fully from their course of study or research. Non-EEA nationals must also satisfy UK Visas and Immigration (UKVI) immigration requirements for English language for visa purposes.
For more information on English Language requirements for EEA and non-EEA nationals see: www.qub.ac.uk/EnglishLanguageReqs.
If you need to improve your English language skills before you enter this degree programme, Queen's University Belfast International Study Centre offers a range of English language courses. These intensive and flexible courses are designed to improve your English ability for admission to this degree.
This course provides knowledge and skills which are highly valued in both child and adult services across health and social acre
In addition to your degree programme, at Queen's you can have the opportunity to gain wider life, academic and employability skills. For example, placements, voluntary work, clubs, societies, sports and lots more. So not only do you graduate with a degree recognised from a world leading university, you'll have practical national and international experience plus a wider exposure to life overall. We call this Graduate Plus/Future Ready Award. It's what makes studying at Queen's University Belfast special.
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Entry Requirements
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Fees and Funding
Northern Ireland (NI) 1 | £2,567 |
Republic of Ireland (ROI) 2 | £2,567 |
England, Scotland or Wales (GB) 1 | £3,467 |
EU Other 3 | £7,667 |
International | £7,667 |
1EU citizens in the EU Settlement Scheme, with settled status, will be charged the NI or GB tuition fee based on where they are ordinarily resident. Students who are ROI nationals resident in GB will be charged the GB fee.
2 EU students who are ROI nationals resident in ROI are eligible for NI tuition fees.
3 EU Other students (excludes Republic of Ireland nationals living in GB, NI or ROI) are charged tuition fees in line with international fees.
All tuition fees quoted relate to a single year of study unless stated otherwise. Tuition fees will be subject to an annual inflationary increase, unless explicitly stated otherwise.
More information on postgraduate tuition fees.
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Students undertaking a period of work placement or study abroad, as either a compulsory or optional part of their programme, should be aware that they will have to fund additional travel and living costs.
If a programme includes a major project or dissertation, there may be costs associated with transport, accommodation and/or materials. The amount will depend on the project chosen. There may also be additional costs for printing and binding.
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There are also additional charges for graduation ceremonies, examination resits and library fines.
The Department for the Economy will provide a tuition fee loan of up to £6,500 per NI / EU student for postgraduate study. Tuition fee loan information.
A postgraduate loans system in the UK offers government-backed student loans of up to £11,836 for taught and research Masters courses in all subject areas (excluding Initial Teacher Education/PGCE, where undergraduate student finance is available). Criteria, eligibility, repayment and application information are available on the UK government website.
More information on funding options and financial assistance - please check this link regularly, even after you have submitted an application, as new scholarships may become available to you.
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Apply using our online Queen's Portal and follow the step-by-step instructions on how to apply.
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Queen's University Belfast Terms and Conditions.
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Fees and Funding