Direct work downloadable resources

Direct Work Resource Pack

Download a PDF version of the Direct Work resource pack.

These resources for download have been developed to aim to give practitioners the tools to communicate, engage and support improved participation with those people we support in our direct work. It is hoped better communication leads to better relationships and a better understanding of what is important to the individual and /or carer.  

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Most social care professionals recognise that understanding the person we are working with is key to strength-based practice, but sometimes we may not have the tools or resources to hand to support communication and engagement with people.

So, we established a group to create a direct work toolkit which includes lots of downloadable resources such as worksheets, activities to explore feelings and worries alongside suggestions of things you may want to have in an actual toolkit.

We wanted this to be a shared set of tools and resources and to develop a shared language and understanding about direct work with adults. This will hopefully also help those who feel less confident by providing some different tools for supporting communication and engagement.

Claire Chapman, Social Worker, Transforming Care, All Age Disability Team explains why direct work is important in her practice and personal life.

"I have used my tools in both children and adult settings to promote engagement, to connect, to break down barriers, to have fun, to help understand and to illustrate an outcome. The outcome may be someone’s’ own wishes and feelings, needs or fears. It may also be about having shared time together, putting down the laptop and engaging in the lived world of the person you are supporting. Tools help for people who need to fidget in order to self-regulate and connect, they are great for breaking the ice and engaging without words.  Tools can be made at home or with the person together but need to have purpose, they do not replace practice, they support and supplement it.

From a personal experience as a mother of an adult child who has complex needs, I encourage professionals who come and meet him, to spend some time playing alongside him – sharing his toys and sharing a space with him. My adult son may not be able to answer verbally the objectives of the visit or even understand it, but at least the professional would go away with a sense of feeling that they have spent some real time with him and can feel that they have entered into a little of his personalised world."

If you want to know more this is a great article which promotes the use of tools within our direct work in all elements of social work and social care.

Thanks to ‘Focus Independent Adult Social Work’ for allowing us to use resources they have already included in their own ‘Adult Social Work Toolkit’.