Students studying at desk.

Year of study

2025

Key details

Start date(s)
September 2025
Location
Main Campus (Horsforth)
School
Children, Young People and Families
Study Mode
Full-time (1 year)

Do you want to broaden your career options within the field of children's services? Are you ready to progress in your career?

Our Professional Practice programme in Supporting Children, Young People and Families is a work-based learning Level 6 top-up degree.

It's designed to be studied on completion of a Foundation degree (or equivalent Level 5 qualification), in an area related to the support of children, young people and families.

The Student Contract

About this course

You'll have the opportunity to develop your subject expertise by exploring contemporary issues affecting how children, young people and families are supported.

You'll explore debates around children's services, looking at the challenges facing those working in a multi-agency environment.

Applying theory to practice, you'll undertake a range of work-based activities, including workplace analysis of the practices and models of management, teamwork, children's learning and experience.

You'll develop an understanding of the key issues related to ethical practice, as well as learn how to reflect critically on workplace practices in a professional fashion.

You'll receive extensive support throughout your studies, starting with a specially designed induction programme. We also encourage you to identify a workplace mentor who could support you with your studies and research.

This Professional Practice degree is studied alongside your existing work commitments.  The course is full-time for one year, during which time you'll attend University for one full day per week (Thursdays 9.00am - 6.00pm) in addition to a minimum of two days working in a relevant job role.

Course modules

You will study a variety of modules across your programme of study. The module details given below are subject to change and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.

Year 1

During your first year, you'll study four core modules.

Evaluating Current Debates and Developments - Core

Critically explore current issues, developments, policies and approaches regarding children, young people and families, and evaluate the strategies available.

You'll critically assess the impact of leadership and management in your setting.

You'll explore how different events and issues influence the lives of children, young people and families.

You'll also contextualise contemporary controversies of modern childhood within historical perspectives.

You'll be introduced to emerging and novel controversies as they emerge in the news, media and current affairs, and you'll need to keep up to date with current affairs and developments in your area of expertise and practice.

Work-Related Project - Core

In the first semester, you'll produce an ethics statement addressing ethical issues of your research, contextualised in a Research Design Brief.

You'll explore what you hope to study, formulate your proposed methodological approach and do a literature review.

The second semester is largely self-managed and work-based, with tutorials to support you.

You'll investigate an element of your own practice, gathering data, evaluating it and presenting your findings in the context of relevant theory and studies.

You'll also discuss your methodological approach.

You'll be expected to demonstrate an ability to analyse your reading in a Findings/Discussions section and report these in an appropriate format.

Safeguarding and Supporting Welfare - Core

Explore the complex issue of safeguarding and protecting children.

We'll cover the relationship between ethics and professional accountability, requirements set out in welfare and safeguarding legislation and policy initiatives, and relevant current research findings.

You'll be expected to engage with current procedures and understand the frameworks all practitioners need to operate within.

You'll learn the different categories of abuse and the impact portrayals of child abuse in the media have had on safeguarding and welfare practice.

You'll differentiate between usual child developmental needs and definitions of significant harm.

Specialist Family Interventions - Core

Evaluate the range of problems that families can face whilst children are growing up.

You'll apply current research and theory as we explore each problem within an ethical framework.

You'll be encouraged to compare political and media rhetoric with clear research findings.

We'll look at the determination of factors of risk and vulnerability within the family context, and the role of the state in protecting the vulnerable.

You'll critically assess the conflict between individual rights and freedoms and collective responsibilities for families, and the impact of leadership and management in the workplace.

Learning and teaching

Assessment

A variety of assessment methods are used, matched to the learning outcomes for your programme, allowing you to apply and demonstrate the full range of knowledge and skills that you have developed.

For more details on specific assessment methods for this course contact hello@leedstrinity.ac.uk

Programme delivery

Your time on campus, learning through in-person teaching, is at the heart of your academic experience and the way we deliver our programmes. This is supported and further enhanced by additional engagement activities and opportunities provided online and through digital teaching materials. This blended approach seeks to ensure a positive learning and teaching student experience.

Your programme of study has been carefully designed around a three-phase model of delivery:

  1. Preparation: You will be given clear tasks to support you in preparing for live teaching. This could include watching a short-pre-recorded lecture, reading a paper or text chapter or preparing other material for use in class.
  2. Live: All your live teaching will be designed around active learning, providing you with valuable opportunities to build on preparation tasks, interact with staff and peers, and surface any misunderstandings.
  3. Post: Follow-up activities will include opportunities for you to check understanding, for staff to receive feedback from you and your peers to inform subsequent sessions, and for you to apply learning to new situations or context.

Preparation, Live and Post teaching and learning and the digital materials used will vary by course, but will be designed to help you structure your learning, take a full and active part in your course, and apply and test your developing knowledge and skills.

Learning and teaching

At Leeds Trinity we aim to provide an excellent student experience and provide you with the tools and support to help you achieve your academic, personal and professional potential.

Our Learning, Teaching and Assessment Strategy delivers excellence by providing the framework for:

  • high quality teaching
  • an engaging and inclusive approach to learning, assessment and achievement
  • a clear structure through which you progress in your academic studies, your personal development and towards professional-level employment or further study.

We have a strong reputation for developing student employability, supporting your development towards graduate employment, with relevant skills embedded throughout your programme of study.

We endeavour to develop curiosity, confidence, courage, ambition and aspiration in all students through the key themes in our Learning and Teaching Strategy:

  • Student Involvement and Engagement
  • Inclusion
  • Integrated Programme and Assessment Experience
  • Digital Literacy and Skills
  • Employability and Enterprise

To help you achieve your potential we emphasise learning as a collaborative process, with a range of student-led and real-world activities. This approach ensures that you fully engage in shaping your own learning, developing your critical thinking and reflective skills so that you can identify your own strengths and weaknesses, and use the extensive learning support system we offer to shape your own development.

We believe the secret to great learning and teaching is simple: it is about creating an inclusive learning experience that allows all students to thrive through:

  • Personalised support
  • Expert lecturers
  • Strong connections with employers
  • An international outlook
  • Understanding how to use tools and technology to support learning and development

Entry requirements

Leeds Trinity University is committed to recruiting students with talent and potential and who we feel will benefit greatly from their academic and non-academic experiences here. We treat every application on its own merits; we value highly the experience you illustrate in your personal statement.

Information about the large range of qualifications we accept, including A-Levels, BTECs and T Levels, can be found on our entry requirements page. If you need additional advice or are taking qualifications that are not covered in the information supplied, please contact our Admissions Office.

For our Professional Practice degrees, you must have:

  • a Foundation degree in a relevant area or equivalent Level 5 qualification
  • GCSE English Language or English Literature at Grade C or 4 or above (or accepted equivalent such as level 2 Functional Skills in English)
  • Support from your workplace to join the programme and a written reference from your employer which will also confirm whether you already have a DBS check

This course is not available to students on a Student Route Visa.

Fees and finance

UK Home fees £9,535 per year
Full-time

Funding

UK Home Students:

Tuition fees cost £9,535 a year for this course in 2025/2026. Students who enrolled in 2024/2025 will also be charged £9,535 for academic year 2025/2026.

Tuition fees for part-time study are charged a pro-rata amount of the full-time equivalent.

Depending on government policy, tuition fees may change in future years.

Tuition fees for 2026/2027 entry will be set in summer 2025.

Leeds Trinity offers a range of bursaries and scholarships to help support students while you study.

Additional costs

We advise students that there may be additional course costs in addition to annual tuition fees. These include:

  • Books - recommended and required reading lists will be provided at the start of your course. All the books and e-books are available from our Library to borrow but you may choose to purchase your own.
  • Print costs - the University provides students with a £6 printing credit each academic year which can be topped up either on campus or online.

How to apply

Complete and submit the online application form via the link below.

The admissions team will acknowledge receipt of your application, and aim to make a decision within two weeks of receiving your application.

If you've been made an offer, you'll need to accept or decline by emailing admissions@leedstrinity.ac.uk.

There is no official closing date for applications, but the course will be closed when it is full. We therefore encourage you to make your application as early as possible.

Please ensure you complete the application form in full and supply all the required supporting documentation when you make your initial application. Incomplete applications may be rejected.

If you need advice on your application, please contact our admissions team on 0113 283 7123 (Monday to Thursday, 9.00am to 5.00pm, or Friday 9.00am to 4.00pm) or admissions@leedstrinity.ac.uk

Apply now

Before making you an offer for this course, we require your employer to send us a completed Employer Approval to Study Form.

You are therefore advised to ask your employer to complete the Employer Approval to Study Form before you submit your online application form. We will email you the Employer Approval to Study Form when we receive your application, however, to speed up the process, we encourage you to send this to your employer before you submit your application form.

Your employer should email the completed form to admissions@leedstrinity.ac.uk as soon as possible.



Download Professional Practice Employer Approval to Study form

Graduate opportunities

Providing you with the opportunity to develop the professional skills and experience you need to launch your career is at the heart of everything we do at Leeds Trinity University.

By the time you graduate, you'll be ready to begin a successful career in family support work, children's centre work or social work (after further training).

After you graduate, Careers and Placements will help you as you pursue your chosen career through our mentoring scheme, support with CV and interview preparation and access to graduate employability events.

To find out how we can help you make your career ambitions a reality, visit:

Careers

Leeds Trinity has helped me believe in myself and know that anything is possible with hard work and motivation. I started with a Foundation degree and progressed on to the top-up course. I have since graduated with a PGCE. I would highly recommend anyone thinking of returning to education to take this work-based learning route - the lecturers are so helpful and the workload is manageable whilst also working.

Francheska-May Bottomley
Pre-school Room Supervisor, Professional Practice: Supporting Children, Young People and Families BA (Hons) graduate

Meet the team

Children, Young People and Families Clarrie Smith
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Children, Young People and Families Amanda Jefferson
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Children, Young People and Families Sarah Flanagan
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Children, Young People and Families Lyndsey Layton
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