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About us

He hapori rapu i te taumata o te mātauranga, me te rangahau. A community of inter-professional learning and research.

If you are committed to improving people’s lives and a vocation where you can make a difference, the opportunities offered by the Centre for Health and Social Practice are endless. As part of this centre, you will be part of a community that is dedicated to social care, health, well-being and protection.

The programmes we offer lead to hands-on careers and our teaching reflects this. You will have access to real-world simulated learning and the latest technology, with opportunities for interprofessional education to learn from other professions and improve all-round care. Our experienced and registered tutors genuinely care about your success and will guide you on your way.

We know the needs of our stakeholders are always changing, so we deliver fit-for-purpose programmes that are responsive to changes in the health and social practice sectors. We value inclusion, diversity, and the achievement of potential in all of our staff and students. We are committed to social justice, and our treaty partnership between Tangata Whenua and Tauiwi underpins everything we do.

Study with us

Now is the time to turn your passion for people into a career.

In the world of health and social practice you will be challenged, inspired, and rewarded – sometimes all at once. We will give you the skills and knowledge to change the world. Be the graduate everyone is looking for.

Pathways

Click on the images below to see a larger version.

Postgraduate nursing

Health and social practice pathway diagram

Postgraduate nursing

Postgraduate nursing pathway diagram
Please check the entry criteria for each programme to see which course is the best level for you to begin with. The entry criteria information can be found on each of the programme pages here online. You can also contact us directly to discuss the appropriate level for you at info@wintec.ac.nz.

Subject areas

Courses

Nursing

Postgraduate and master's for health and social practice

Short courses/professional programmes

Our facilities

The Centre for Health and Social Practice facilities are designed for students to get the most out of their learning. The latest technology is made available to put theoretical knowledge into practice. Students can expect environments such as a simulated ward with computerised patient models who assume real health issues. We value diversity and inclusion; facilities are designed to encourage interprofessional learning between health and social care, with opportunities for interaction between staff and students.

Get involved

Be part of our community and see how we can work together.

The Centre for Health and Social Practice maintains close relationships with the industry and professional bodies that graduates register with. Our staff are experienced in their fields and are continuously active in health and social practice research. Our students are taught with a focus on the practical elements of healthcare and are encouraged to apply theoretical knowledge to real-world learning environments. Each year students will gain credit for undertaking placements, internships, or volunteer work in their field. 

Placements

Our teaching approach is focused on the practical side of learning and we understand the benefits of real-world work environments for our students’ learning. Students in the Centre for Health and Social Practice spend time across their programmes in work placements for credit. The amount of time spent on placement varies according to qualification and year; first year students will spend approximately a quarter of the year doing work placement while third year students will spend most of their time on placement.

News

A fresh approach to curriculum design puts learner success first

Successful curriculum design considers learners and puts their needs first

Learner success has always been at the forefront of curriculum design, but a collaboration between LearningWorks and Waikato Institute of Technology (Wintec) has hit on a formula to maximise learning opportunities.

This year, a team from LearningWorks and Wintec Centre for Health and Social Practice  took a deep dive into teaching and learning needs to re-evaluate and develop two Wintec degrees.

Their combined task was to develop year two of the new Bachelor of Social Work and Paetahi Tumu Kōrero Bachelor of Counselling degrees offered at Wintec to better enable learners, who are mainly adult second chance students needing flexible learning options.

The team adopted new ways of working to redevelop these qualifications for the learning needs of students and cast a wider net across faculty and students.

LearningWorks’ Instructional Designer Lisa Gordon says that this meant a more detailed and highly collaborative upfront process to better enable students studying these qualifications.

“Working together closely with teachers and students, and taking more time to understand their needs and what they want to achieve, means understanding what’s needed to design and develop engaging courseware.

“Collaboration every step of the way across a wider teaching and learning group, and being open and receptive, creates a much better process and outcome for the learner.”

Acting Director, Wintec Centre for Health and Social Practice Trudy Pocock says “working with LearningWorks has enabled us to explore new ways of engaging our students within our flexible learning environment”.

“LearningWorks has really helped us on this journey and we’re excited about what we will be presenting to students in 2020.”

New ways of working included developing a content mapping system, benchmarking best teaching practice and looking at the needs and demographics of current learners - particularly those with work commitments and family responsibilities.

“Flipping the learning to make it more accessible to learners, means they have more flexibility on how and where they learn, which really supports the known barriers to learning,” adds Lisa.

“As a group, by being more open and receptive, we can better understand who we are, what we do and how to get the best out of what we provide for our learners success.”

“This year we’re using best-practice design tools like a new interactive content map that lists outputs, actions and responsibilities, so course delivery can be more responsive.”

LearningWorks Learning Design Team Lead, Shelley Hardgrave manages EDevelopment House (EDH), a collaborative product design and development hub where experts from across Wintec and LearningWorks design and develop innovative products aligned to Wintec’s Ako: Teaching and Learning Directions.

“This project was all about collaboration every step of the way. Wintec’s Centre for Health and Social Practice team were highly invested and they embraced the whole project.

“The results from greater collaboration have created exciting blended content to enable more live learning with greater immediacy.”

The development team is looking forward to the delivery of the new Bachelor of Social Work and Paetahi Tumu Kōrero Bachelor of Counselling degrees in 2020 and the feedback from students and their tutors.

Read more:
LearningWorks scoops two of seven national education awards
Equal pay awards name Wintec a winning workplace for women
New Zealand's newest physiotherapy school is working for students

Events

  • Ngā Rā Tūwhera | Open Day

    Explore your future options at Ngā Rā Tūwhera | Open Day! This whānau-friendly experience is the perfect opportunity to meet our teams, discover course options, and get a sense of what study is all about.

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