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This book demonstrates novel ways of working across a wide variety of clinical areas, including children, people with learning difficulties and adults with acquired communication disabilities. It explores the paradigm shifts beyond technical rational approaches to professional artistry underpinned by reflective practice and user involvement. It discusses values, understanding expectations of clients, the commonalities of therapy, the Care Aims model and the biopsychosocial model in dysphasia management. The contributors look at the three elements of competence, knowledge, skills and attitudes and attributes, to demonstrate the relationship between observable skills and the hidden influential aspects of competence that play a vital role in making a practitioner professionally competent. By bringing together constructs and challenges from differing areas of practice, the book will stimulate readers to think about their work in new ways by learning from experts outside their own scope of practice.
Edited by Carolyn Anderson, Senior Lecturer in Speech and Language Therapy, University of Strathclyde, UK, and Anna van der Gaag, Honorary Research Fellow, University of Glasgow, UK
Contributors viiPreface viiiChapter l The geography of professional practice: swamps and icebergs 1Anna van der Gaag and Carolyn AndersonChapter 2 Values in professional practice 10Anna van der Gaag and Chris MowlesChapter 3 Understanding expectations 27Margaret GlogowskaChapter 4 The Care Aims model 43Kate MalcomesChapter 5 Implementation of the Care Aims model: challenges and opportunities 72Pauline BeirneChapter 6 Learning to be common in therapy 86Karen BunningChapter 7 Journeys with aphasia: personal reflections 111Kate SwinburnChapter 8 Dysphagia: combining conflicting models? 131Karen KrawcazykChapter 9 Reflection in practice 155Carolyn AndersonIndex 175