Training and career progression at Ashdale Care standard
Training and career development are some of the most important factors in job satisfaction. At Ashdale we prioritise them to help our people grow.
Continue ReadingTraining and career development are some of the most important factors in job satisfaction. At Ashdale we prioritise them to help our people grow.
Continue ReadingMindfulness exercises can help to ground and calm, and help people to cope with stress. Ashdale Care’s Lucy McKenna offers some advice on using the STOP technique
Continue ReadingMindfulness exercises can help to ground and calm, and help people to cope with stress. Ashdale Care’s Lucy McKenna offers some advice on using the STOP technique
Continue ReadingMindfulness exercises can help to ground and calm, and help people to cope with stress. Ashdale Care’s Lucy McKenna offers some advice on using the STOP technique
Continue ReadingFind out how Devon’s career brought her to work at Ashdale Care, and what she loves about her job
Continue ReadingFind out how Lucy became a Residential Social Care Worker for Ashdale Care, and what she loves about her job.
Continue ReadingAnother in our series of Meet the Team blogs. Our people are our most valuable asset at Ashdale Care - this month meet Laura Ward, our newest Home Manager
Continue ReadingIt’s the people that make Ashdale Care such a special place, so we thought you should meet some of them! In this occasional series, we’ll find out more about an individual member of the Ashdale Care Community. This month we talk cakes, chickens and coffee with HR Director Kelly Looker and find out what her guilty pleasure is!
Continue ReadingDiscover how Cornell University’s CARE programme helps Ashdale Care deliver the best therapeutic residential care for young people.
Continue ReadingAshdale Care CEO Paula tells us how she fulfilled her vision of a very different kind of care home for children. The story of Ashdale Care Ireland began back in the 1990s, when Social Work student Paula Kane observed how traumatised children were placed in institutions and expected to conform, when they felt worthless and detached from society. As Paula went to work in the social care field she recalls...
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