“…This aspect of the complexity of practice assessment -the balance between the holistic and the 'partial' (Doel et al, 2002, p.35) -was also voiced as a particular concern by a PE within The issue of what social work professional education should develop and nurture, the primacy (or not) of skills and observable and tangible outcomes, and what is 'buried' within an holistic assessment framework such as the PCF, goes to the heart of longstanding debates about a competency based approach to assessment (Kelly and Horder, 2001;Skinner and Whyte, 2004;Evans, 1999). Such an approach to assessment, whilst dominant within social work education 20 from the DipSW (CCETSW, 1989) through to the Degree (DoH, 2002) has been subject to wellrehearsed criticisms of its deficiencies -that its focus on practice performance, often task specific, encourages a 'surface' approach to practice that is outcome focussed on a 'minimum' standard of competence/achievement and which can result in a 'cloak of competence' (Kelly and Horder, 2001, p.693) and that it promotes the gathering of 'evidence' ("I've done all my key roles…") above analysis and critical reflection on practice , thereby reducing or impeding learning (Evans, 1999;Mc Nay et al, 2009).…”