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Submission Number: 248
Submission ID: 1432
Submission UUID: f6c9243d-74bc-4c21-830f-4321ffa7dcfd
Submission URI: /2025/abstracts

Created: Mon, 06/30/2025 - 19:54
Completed: Mon, 06/30/2025 - 20:04
Changed: Wed, 07/16/2025 - 08:23

Remote IP address: 102.33.32.21
Submitted by: Anonymous
Language: English

Is draft: No
Current page: Complete
Webform: Abstract
Title Ms.
Lastname Pezisa
Firstname Anelisa
eMail anelisa.pezisa@mandela.ac.za
Mobile 0761031420
Institution Nelson mandela university
Biosketch Anelisa Pezisa is an emerging academic and assistant lecturer, currently pursuing her PhD in Social Development Professions at Nelson Mandela University. Her research interest is Online Work-Integrated Learning (WIL), with a focus on the implications for developing key competencies for social work education during emergencies, for example COVID-19.
Is there a Second Presenter? No
Title of Presentatation Adapting Work-Integrated Learning in Social Work Education: Lessons from the COVID-19 Shift to Online Platforms in South Africa
Theme Selection THEME 6: Main-streaming Digital and Assessment Tools in Social Work Practice
Subtheme SIX Selection SUB 6.1 Integrating digital tools into traditional social work settings.
Select your Presentation Type Oral Presentation
Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic brought unprecedented disruptions to higher education globally, with Work-Integrated Learning (WIL) in social work education among the most affected. Traditionally grounded in face-to-face engagement, social work WIL rapidly shifted to online platforms, raising complex challenges for competency development in a practice-based profession. This presentation draws from a critical review of both international and South African literature to examine how universities navigated this transition. While global studies highlighted shared challenges such as digital inequality, reduced interpersonal engagement, and complexities in assessing practical skills remotely, the South African context revealed additional barriers, including infrastructural disparities, socio-economic inequalities, and digital exclusion. Despite these challenges, the pandemic also accelerated digital transformation in social work education, offering opportunities for flexible, innovative, and blended WIL models. Findings revealed a significant gap in South African research on online WIL in social work, particularly in capturing the experiences of students, lecturers, and supervisors. The paper concludes by advocating for contextually grounded, ethically responsible, and inclusive online WIL guidelines that balance digital innovation with the relational ethos of social work, offering lessons for both South African and global higher education landscapes.
Title Prof
Firstname John
Lastname Rautenbach
Does the Abstract fit the selected Theme? Yes
What Area does this Abstract Focus on? Education
Status Accepted
Title Mrs
Firstname Kgomotso
Lastname Wagner
Does the Abstract fit the selected Theme? Yes
What Area does this Abstract Focus on? Education
Status Accepted