units

OCC5131

Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences

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Monash University

Monash University Handbook 2010 Postgraduate - Unit

6 points, SCA Band 2, 0.125 EFTSL

LevelPostgraduate
FacultyFaculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences
OfferedPeninsula First semester 2010 (Day)
Coordinator(s)Dr Ted Brown

Synopsis

A This unit will provide an in depth overview of the issues related to
the assessment of children (ethical, legal, professional, educational, clinical). The unit will start by introducing the reasons, uses, and purposes of assessment. Specific methods (e.g.observation, objective performance, parent-report) related to the assessment of children will be reviewed. Particular attention will be paid to issues related to family-centred practice and assessing children in naturalistic environments. Different contexts (e.g., clinic, community, school, home) where assessment is completed, issues related to the assessment of children at different age levels / developmental levels and the evaluation of children with special needs will
be discussed. Ethical, policy and legal issues related to the assessment of children will be presented and critiqued. Specific types of assessment tools, scales, and instruments appropriate for use with children will be presented and reviewed. This will provide a broad base of 7 knowledge and skills for occupational therapy and other health professional students wishing to work with children and families in clinical, educational, home, and community settings.

Objectives

At the completion of this unit, students will:

  1. Describe the characteristics, types, and methods of assessment best suited for use with children and their families
  2. Develop and describe assessment approaches appropriate for children at different
developmental levels and for children with special needs
  1. Describe the assessment approaches that best fit with naturalistic assessment and familycentred practice
  2. Demonstrate an advanced knowledge of ethical, policy, and legal issues related to the assessment of children.
  3. Demonstrate an advanced knowledge of assessment tools, scales, and instruments used to evaluate the skills, interests, roles, and abilities of children
  4. Demonstrate competence in searching, describing, summarising, and presenting (verbally and in writing) the evidence from research literature on a specific topic related to child assessment.

Assessment

Seminar presentation (10%)
Critique (1000 words)(30%)
Class participation (10%)
Essay (3000 words)(50%)

Chief examiner(s)

Associate Professor Ted Brown

Contact hours

On Campus: 3 hours per week of lectures plus 1 hour per week of
tutorial. 8 hours per week of private study (reading, literature review, practicing skills,
preparation of assignments, and other self-directed learning activities). Averaged over the 13 week semester - a total of 156 hours.