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Making Social Work Count: A Curriculum Innovation to Teach Quantitative Research Methods and Statistical Analysis to Undergraduate Social Work Students in the United Kingdom
Authors:Barbra Teater  Jessica Roy  John Carpenter  Donald Forrester  John Devaney  Jonathan Scourfield
Institution:1. Department of Social Work, College of Staten Island, City University of New York, Staten Island, New York, USA;2. School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom;3. School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom;4. School of Sociology, Social Policy, and Social Work, Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast, Ireland
Abstract:Students in the United Kingdom (UK) are found to lack knowledge and skills in quantitative research methods. To address this gap, a quantitative research method and statistical analysis curriculum comprising 10 individual lessons was developed, piloted, and evaluated at two universities The evaluation found that BSW students’ (= 81) self-efficacy improved significantly from pre- to posttest, but statistical knowledge improved only slightly and the improvement was not statistically significant. The findings point to recommendations for social work educators in the UK and beyond to consider when integrating the 10-input quantitative method curriculum and when teaching research methods and statistics to undergraduate social work students.
Keywords:BSW students  curriculum development  quantitative methods  research self-efficacy  statistics  teaching research
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