Allied health placements expand to meet demand

March 21, 2023

Allied health programs included in the agreement are occupational therapy, psychology, speech pathology, social work, physiotherapy, exercise physiology, podiatry, human movement, and nutrition. The initiative will help meet growing industry demands by simplifying pathways for university students to arrange work placements in government schools. Improving the placement program will also help allied health students identify a clear employment pathway into valuable roles in the public education sector. The formalised process will also benefit schools by providing valuable assistance to allied health professionals working in the sector. Minister Boyer says allied health university students make an important contribution in our schools.

03 February 2023

The University of South Australia has signed a tri-university Memorandum of Intent (MOI) to boost allied health placements in the State’s schools, providing much needed supports for school students, and experienced, job-ready graduates for the future.

Signed by the Minister for Education, Training and Skills, Blair Boyer, with the three universities – UniSA, the University of Adelaide and Flinders University – the partnership will deliver an improved allied health placement program in public schools in South Australia.

Allied health programs included in the agreement are occupational therapy, psychology, speech pathology, social work, physiotherapy, exercise physiology, podiatry, human movement, and nutrition.

The initiative will help meet growing industry demands by simplifying pathways for university students to arrange work placements in government schools.

Improving the placement program will also help allied health students identify a clear employment pathway into valuable roles in the public education sector.

The formalised process will also benefit schools by providing valuable assistance to allied health professionals working in the sector.

Minister Boyer says allied health university students make an important contribution in our schools.

“By simplifying access to work placement in our schools, we can provide clearer employment pathways for these graduates, ensuring they have real world skills and valuable work experience,” Minister Boyer says.

“We have a significant skills shortage in a range of allied health occupations, not only here in South Australia, but across the country, so this MOI will help better prepare students for when they finish their studies.”

University of South Australia Vice Chancellor Professor David Lloyd says UniSA is pleased to be partnering with the State Government and public schools to produce allied health professionals of the future.

“This partnership provides an opportunity for UniSA to expand our clinical work placement program into schools, so that we can provide much-needed supports to school students, and continue to deliver experienced, job-ready graduates.”

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Media contact: Annabel Mansfield M: +61 479 182 489 E: [email protected]

The source of this news is from University of South Australia

Popular in Research

1

Apr 6, 2024

Conspiracy theory runs wild linking New York City’s 4.8-magnitude earthquake to date of solar eclipse

2

Mar 27, 2024

Researchers Show Classical Computers Can Keep Up with, and Surpass, Their Quantum Counterparts

3

Apr 4, 2024

Five Sydney researchers honoured by Australian Academy of Science

4

6 days ago

The rise of Dawn

5

Mar 27, 2024

VIU professor researching adversarial situations on networks

An MIT philosopher’s call for a civil discussion on gender and sex

6 days ago

Most voters say Biden, Trump both mentally unfit for 2nd term, poll finds

1 week ago

Nasdaq Futures Up 2% as Nvidia Powers Global Rally: Markets Wrap

1 week ago

Meet the former organized-crime prosecutor now overseeing the Trump Organization

Apr 5, 2024

Outreach Roundup

1 week ago

MIT course aids social connection, better relationships, and happiness

Apr 7, 2024