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Welcome to

Core Correctional Skills — an evidence-based online course designed for probation and correctional practitioners who want to strengthen the skills that matter most in everyday practice.

Across six modules, you will work through the foundations of effective practice, the working alliance, pro-social modelling, problem-solving, motivational interviewing, and cognitive-behavioural interventions. The course is practical, grounded in research, and built around realistic scenarios drawn from correctional settings.

These skills are essential. Research consistently shows that the quality of interaction between practitioners and the people they supervise is one of the strongest predictors of engagement and outcomes. But skills alone are not enough. Effective practice also requires attention to the broader context — the social capital available to the people we work with, the legitimacy of the supervisory process as they experience it, and the structural conditions of social justice that shape who enters the system and why. Core correctional skills gain their full meaning when embedded in a practice that is also attentive to equity, context, and the social conditions of change.

This course offers you a strong foundation. What you build on it is what will make the difference.

Module 1 – Foundations of Effective Correctional Practice. Why Skills, Theory, and Everyday Decisions Matter

Learning Objectives: By the end of this module, participants will be able to:- Explain what is meant by effective correctional practice and why skills matter beyond formal authority.- Describe the core assumptions of the Risk–Need–Responsivity (RNR) model and apply them to everyday practice. – Explain the desistance paradigm and how it reframes the role of the practitioner. – Compare RNR and desistance approaches and recognise how they can complement each other. – Reflect on how organisational culture and professional roles shape practice. – Identify how theory is already present—implicitly or explicitly—in their own daily decisions.

Lessons

Introduction Preview Brief introduction to evidence-based practice (EBP) Preview What does 'evidence-based practice' mean at the beginning of the 21st century? Preview Practice Dialogues Preview Brief recap on what evidence-based practice means Preview Module Quiz Preview Further Resources Preview Infographic Preview

Module 2 – Working Alliance

Learning Objectives: By the end of this module, participants will be able to:- Demonstrate a clear understanding of the working alliance as a core component of effective correctional practice, including its relevance in mandated and coercive contexts.- Apply evidence-based strategies to build and maintain a workable professional relationship with involuntary clients, balancing authority, fairness, and engagement.- Communicate roles, goals, and tasks clearly and transparently, including the dual role of care and control, in order to reduce resistance and support cooperation.- Use structured relational skills—including empathy, realistic optimism, appropriate humour, and limited self-disclosure—to support engagement without compromising professional boundaries or authority.- Establish minimum conditions for collaboration during the first interview, recognising its role in shaping expectations, legitimacy, and future engagement.

Lessons

Brief introduction to the working alliance Essential reading Practice dialogue Brief recap of what WA means and how it is practiced Module Quiz Further Resources Infographic

Module 3 – Pro-social Modelling

Learning Objectives: By the end of this module, participants will be able to:- Explain pro-social modelling as a core correctional skill grounded in everyday practice.- Describe the three interrelated components of pro-social modelling and how they work together.- Apply pro-social modelling deliberately in routine and challenging interactions with involuntary clients.- Distinguish between reinforcing behaviour and praising the person.- Challenge anti-social behaviour firmly without escalating conflict.- Reflect critically on their own conduct as a source of learning for clients.- Recognise the ethical and organisational limits of pro-social modelling.

Lessons

Brief presentation of the pro-social modelling Essential reading Practice Dialogue Brief recap of pro-social modelling Module Quiz Further Resources Infographic

Module 4 – Problem-solving

Learning Objectives: By the end of this module, participants will be able to:- Explain the role of problem-solving as a core correctional skill, distinguishing between solving problems for clients and supporting clients to develop their own problem-solving capacities.- Apply a structured problem-solving model in work with involuntary clients, deliberately moving through the stages of problem clarification, option generation, consideration of consequences, decision-making, and implementation.- Integrate the emotional dimension into problem-solving conversations, recognising how strong emotions can disrupt thinking and using simple interventions to restore the client’s capacity for reflection and choice.- Identify and avoid common practice traps, particularly the tendency to provide ready-made solutions or to take over responsibility in situations of pressure or urgency.- Support the implementation and review of client decisions, maintaining an appropriate balance between authority and autonomy and using difficulties in implementation as opportunities for learning rather than as indicators of resistance or non-compliance.

Lessons

Brief introduction to problem-solving Essential reading Practice Dialogue Brief recap of problem-solving Module Quiz Further Reading Infographic

Module 5 – Motivational Interviewing

Learning Objectives: By the end of this module, participants will be able to:- Explain the purpose and relevance of motivational interviewing in correctional practice, particularly in work with involuntary, ambivalent, or resistant clients, and describe how MI supports evidence-based supervision outcomes.- Demonstrate an understanding of the spirit of MI (PACE)—partnership, acceptance, compassion, and evocation—and apply this relational stance while maintaining professional authority and clear boundaries.- Use the four core processes of MI (engaging, focusing, evoking, planning) to structure supervision conversations, recognising when each process is appropriate and avoiding premature problem-solving or planning.- Apply the core communication skills of MI (OARS)—open questions, affirmations, reflective listening, and summaries—to increase client engagement, reduce resistance, and elicit meaningful client participation.- Identify, elicit, and reinforce change talk while responding constructively to sustain talk and resistance, using strategies such as developing discrepancy, evocative questions, and EARS (elaborate, affirm, reflect, summarise).

Lessons

Brief introduction to Motivational Interviewing Essential Reading Practice Dialogue Brief recap of Motivational Interviewing Module Quiz Further Reading Infographic

Module 6 – Cognitive Behavioural Interventions

Learning Objectives: By the end of this module, learners will be able to:- Explain the theoretical foundations of Cognitive Behavioural Interventions in correctional settings.- Define cognitive distortions and describe their role in sustaining offending behaviour.- Identify common offence-supportive cognitive distortions used by offenders.- Analyse how cognitive distortions reduce responsibility, guilt, and motivation for change.- Apply structured techniques to challenge cognitive distortions in a respectful and effective manner.- Reflect critically on their own practice when working with distorted thinking in involuntary clients.

Lessons

Brief introduction to Cognitive Behavioural Interventions (CBI) Essential reading Practice dialogue Brief recap of CBI Module Quiz Further Resources Infographic