Occupational Therapy News OTnews January 2019 | Page 16

FOCUS ON VOLUNTEERING Informing and influencing New and outgoing members of the RCOT Board: Learning and Development explain why taking up such an opportunity is so vital to both the profession and personal development W ould you like a new challenge for 2019? Are you interested in the continuing professional development agenda and educational issues? Might you like to support RCOT, working with new colleagues and advancing education for all members throughout the UK? If your answers are yes, why not consider joining the RCOT Board: Learning and Development as your New Year Resolution for 2019? RCOT boards play an important advisory role, with members bringing together a diverse wealth of experience, expertise and individual perspectives to inform and influence the work of the Royal College. They provide a ‘sounding board’ for the organisation, helping to shape its key areas of work, and providing an opportunity for two-way communication between RCOT and its membership. The board focuses on discussing issues including new and emerging policy, as well as other areas that impact on the education of occupational therapists and the development of the workforce. The board certainly has a lot to consider. Those members who have a particular interest in pre- and post- registration education will be keenly aware of the profound effect of the pace and volume of change in the sector, alongside tight financial constraints. In recent times, we have seen the introduction of a new model of funding for pre-registration education, particularly in England, plus expansion in the number of providers UK-wide. Apprenticeships for occupational therapy, the development of healthcare support workers and advanced clinical practice are now emerging. Funding for continuing professional development (CPD) has become a rare commodity, and there seems to be an ever-increasing portfolio of frameworks designed to establish capabilities in various practice domains, while ‘credentialing’ is gathering momentum in some quarters. These types of areas have been subject to the attention of the board to date. 16 OTnews January 2019 The board has also discussed the evolution and launch of RCOT’s Career Development Framework, which has been exceptionally well received, and a rich variety of case studies are now being collated to illustrate its effective use by all segments of the membership. Considerable energy is being invested in developing a portfolio of readily accessible learning resources to aid the progress of individual career development plans within and across the four pillars of the Career Development Framework. Early in 2019, RCOT anticipates launching its new Assured Learning scheme, to provide quality endorsements from RCOT for learning opportunities offered by external providers, adding to the attractive range of CPD resources members can source. RCOT has begun a review of its Standards of learning and development for pre-registration education and has commissioned some research examining its unique role in supporting the delivery of high-quality practice-based learning for pre-registration students. This will certainly be a focus of attention at the board this year. The Royal College continues to work closely with the Trailblazer Group to navigate the requirements of the Institute for Apprenticeships and progress the entry-level apprenticeship pathway ever-closer to the point of being approved for delivery. Challenging, but exciting times, and plenty for the members of the board to contribute to, whether as a manager of staff with CPD needs, a practice-based educator or as an education provider. Outgoing member Wendy Hall, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough AHP Trust adult and specialist services lead says of her experience on the board: ‘Education is every occupational therapist’s business, whether working clinically, educating our service users, our colleagues and ourselves, or managerially developing our staff and the future workforce.