Students’ Comments About the Program

James AlldredWe spoke to James Alldred who spent a semester working as a Community Support Worker at Rideauwood Addiction & Family Services, as part of his criminology work placement program.  Here’s part of our conversation.  (For more information about our placement program, visit our Field Placement.

What kind of work did you do in your placement?

Rideauwood Addiction & Family Services offers a number of addiction-related counselling services that attempt to address each individual that has been impacted by addiction in some way or another. Programs offered by this agency include the Adult Addictions Program, the Family Member Program, the Problem Gambling Program, the School-Based Program, the Ottawa Drug Treatment Court Program and many other services that are offered to the community.

I did my block field placement at the Drug Treatment Court Ottawa section of Rideauwood, which is a program offered as an alternative to the criminal justice system for non-violent individuals who would normally be serving a sentence for an act that is usually associated with their drug addiction. Throughout this placement I performed a variety of tasks such as co-facilitating both group and individual treatment sessions with clients, conducting orientations and interventions with clients, assisting in escorting clients to community appointments, conducting housing visits, and accessing other community partner services.

I attended court and pre-court on a weekly basis to learn more about how the criminal justice system works in conjunction with this non-profit organization. I also helped clients find housing, obtain financial support, and transition to volunteer work, educational programs, or employment. The most important and influential part of my job was the daily interaction that occurred with the approximately 25 clients of various ages, all at different phases in recovery.

What was your favourite part of the job?

My favourite part of the job was getting to do something that I believe in and have learned about throughout my post-secondary education, that people can receive treatment and possibly re-integrate in society instead of simply being punished, incarcerated, and pushed further along the path that has led them to their addiction and criminal activity. Drug Treatment Courts allow individuals the opportunity to seek treatment for the often underlying addiction issues that lead them to commit criminal offences in order to support their addiction, Hopefully, this kind of treatment will end the cycle that many of these individuals have suffered through for many years.

Can you give me an example of how you’ve applied the things you’ve learned in school to the work you’ve done in your placement?

My Specialization in Criminology and Minor in Psychology has largely shaped my perspective on my position at Drug Treatment Court Ottawa by helping me become more understanding, sympathetic, and aware of the positive change that can occur with the help of these programs. In addition, I have recognized that many of the modules that the clients work through either directly or indirectly refer to numerous criminological theories, such as Syke and Matza’s techniques of neutralization theory and Hirchsi’s social control theory. As a result of my education I was able to describe these and many other theories in detail to give the clients a better understanding of the material and how it may be applicable to them.

Has the work you’ve done in your placement helped you better understand the material you’ve learned at school? 

One key example of how the work I have done in my placement has helped me to better understand the material that I have learned in school is how government and non-governmental organizations function in actuality and what their strengths and weaknesses are. I have gained a greater understanding of the criminal justice system and the roles of the key players involved in Drug Treatment Courts (judges, Crown Attorneys, Duty Counsels, parole and probation officers, and the offenders themselves). It has opened my eyes to the fact that partnerships between the criminal justice system and non-profits are possible, but even more so to the fact that non-profit organizations can be just as effective, efficient, and ‘professional’ as governmental bodies.

What have been the benefits of doing a placement?

This is perhaps the most important question for students thinking about doing a field placement. I would strongly recommend doing a field placement to any student who has the opportunity to do so. Field placements are equivalent to three courses, plus the field placement class (12 credits total). The field placement can give you work experience with many prestigious agencies within your field. At the very least the placement can help you build your resume, provide you with references, give you experience within your field, help you to narrow in on a career path of your choice, and inform you of other similar agencies and potential employment opportunities. Furthermore, you get assistance with all of this from professors who are very knowledgeable about agencies within the field and they will aid you with picking a suitable placement and help you to develop as a young professional. Overall, what I and many of my classmates liked best about this placement is that many of us are now working on a contract or full-time for the agencies where we did our placements and know that this would not have been possible within such a competitive job market without doing our placements.