With a decline in traditional work placements supporting academic programmes developing skills and competencies for front-line practitioners, effective new forms of learning are needed to best replicate ‘real world’ experience. Here our focus is on the niche area of housing inspection training for environmental health professionals in the UK, but the lessons arising from this have far greater applicability. The challenges of such training go beyond the traditional classroom in real time: the rapid development of virtual learning during the Covid -19 epidemic, combined with austerity measures within public sector organisations that traditionally supported work placements, have created new opportunities. The situation has become particularly acute both for recruiting new staff, but also to retain existing and experienced staff. Our parallel research also considers what the wider workforce gaps are and how these might be filled going forward. The challenges are multiple and complex, both in numbers of people needed in the profession, but also the quality of their training, its affordability to public sector training budgets, the manner in which it might be both offered and the learning assessed. This paper reviews work taken to date to develop 360 photospheres in supporting synchronous and asynchronous virtual learning to help support learning needs that require multiple, complex areas of knowledge, skills and application. We present our developments to date and discuss the journey still ahead in creating a viable resource capable of substantial impact and wider applicability in supporting the training needs of front- line environmental health practitioners.
Currently Associate Professor in Public Health at the University of Greenwich, Jill Stewart started her housing career in local government. Her research and teaching work focuses on housing and health, including the environmental health housing workforce and training options and has been widely disseminated. Jill is a Fellow of the CIEH, a Member of the Chartered Institute of Housing, a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, a Fellow of the Royal Society for Public Health and an Associate of the Faculty of Public Health. She is co-chair of the London Public Health Housing Network.
Aaron Lawson is lecturer in Environmental Health at Ulster University and has led on practice facing research, including the needs of front-line professionals. His work has especially focused on the development and training potential of 360 photospheres for new environmental health staff as well as for CPD to help retain workforce competencies and skills, including around the ‘acceptability’ of such a training offer to students.