Programplaner og emneplaner - Student
BVV3010 Creative methods and activities in child welfare and social work Course description
- Course name in Norwegian
- Kreative metoder og aktiviteter i barnevern og sosialt arbeid, valgemne
- Study programme
-
Bachelor Programme in Child Care and WelfareBachelor Programme in Social Work
- Weight
- 10.0 ECTS
- Year of study
- 2025/2026
- Programme description
- Course history
-
Introduction
Creative methods in child welfare and social work is an international course for students taking the Bachelor Programme in Child Care and Welfare, the Bachelor's Programme in Social Work and students from OsloMet’s international partner institutions. All teaching and skills training, and the pertaining project report, will be in English if students from abroad are participating.
Knowledge and experience related to creative and aesthetic work methods will be in focus, and the course also covers knowledge of human rights and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. In small groups, the students will plan and carry out a project in the field of practice based on activities and creative, aesthetic methods.
Language of instruction is English.
Required preliminary courses
General admission requirements for the Ph.D. Degree in Behavior Analysis.
Learning outcomes
Students will be able to:
- describe the scope and ambition of the complexity research field, and point to practical applications
- describe and discuss the essential concepts and research methods in complexity research. (Concepts include emergence, complexity, networks, self-organization, pattern formation, evolution and co-evolution, adaptation, chaos, cooperation, competition, interdependence, scaling, dynamic response, information and function. Methods include statistical methods, agent-based modeling, system dynamics and cultural analysis.)
- place their own research project in a complexity context
Teaching and learning methods
The course consists of 1 introductory meeting, and 6 - 12 seminars of 4 x 45 minutes, and time for discussion and a final seminar (4 x 45 minutes). The introductory meeting takes place 2 weeks ahead of the main part of the course. At this meeting, the structure, content and purpose of the course are presented. The students are asked to give short presentations of their Ph.D. projects, and describe how the course is relevant to it. The main purpose of this early session is to help the students to start systematic work with the course readings.
The seminars target central themes from the course readings for discussion and reflection. A high level of student participation is expected. During this time, students will produce several reaction papers (3 - 4 pages double spaced), and a final presentation of one central theme from the course. Themes are assigned by the lecturers. The final seminar consists of a discussion of the presentations, which are distributed in advance as papers not to exceed 10 pages double spaced, and introduced by each candidate in a short (3 minute) session. Course teachers mediate the discussions.
Course requirements
- All papers approved,
- attendance in at least 80 % of the seminars, and
- approved paper presentation in final seminar.
Assessment
Portfolio.
Portfolio requirements: 4 reaction papers
Permitted exam materials and equipment
All
Grading scale
Pass / Fail
Examiners
Internal
Course contact person
Complexity; emergence; self-organization; pattern formation; selection, adaptation and evolution; co-operation and competition; game theory; co-evolving systems; systems dynamics; cultural analysis - ethics, methodical issues - ethics