College Catalog: 2015-2016
School of Social Science and Human Services (SSHS): Social Work (B.S.W.)
Website: School of Social Science and Human Services
Website: Website: Social Work Program
Convener:
Faculty:
- Kim Lorber
- John McLaughlin
- Ann Marie Moreno
- Stephanie Sarabia
- Current as of September 2015
Application to the Program (WORD)
Application to the Program (PDF)
The Mission of the Social Work Program
The Social Work Program’s principal mission is preparing students for beginning level, professional generalist social work practice in a culturally diverse society and an increasingly global environment. Central to this mission is preparing students for a profession dedicated to assisting individuals, groups, families, communities, and organizations in their quest for well-being. The program is committed to teaching students to work for the development of a society which promotes equality, social justice, respect for human diversity, and adequate sustenance for all its members. The program seeks to train and encourage its students to be active, personally and professionally, in taking leadership roles in addressing social problems and challenging social, economic, and environmental injustice. The program is committed to developing students’ skills in culturally competent social work practice, research, social service and social policy formation, and political advocacy in order to further this mission.
About the Major
The Social Work major is offered by the School of Social Science and Human Services and leads to a Bachelor of Social Work (B.S.W.) degree. In addition to preparing students for beginning generalist social work practice, the program also provides preparation for graduate social work education. The Social Work curriculum, taken in conjunction with the School of Social Science
and Human Services’ core program is designed to provide students with an understanding of:
- social issues
- cultural diversity
- environmental sustainability
- social thought
- social welfare history
- social services and human needs
- social work values and ethics
- human behavior and the social environment
- social, economic and environmental justice
- populations at-risk
- social policy
- research methods
- generalist social work practice skills
Supervised field work is a major component of the Social Work curriculum. Over a two year period, students work 480 hours in field placements that are designed to teach generalist social work practice skills and to integrate social work theory with professional practice. The Social Work Program is fully accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE).
Students may also co-major or minor in a second field such as psychology, sociology, economics, political science, and minor in the areas of gerontology, substance abuse, women’s studies, African-American Studies, ethic studies.
Program Policy on Transfer Courses, Life Experience,
and Previous Work Experience
Transfer credit will not be granted for any course in the program’s professional foundation sequence unless it is an equivalent course taken in an accredited CSWE program. The Social Work Program does not grant social work course credit for life experience or previous work experience.
Admission into the Social Work Program
Students may declare an interest in being a social work major prior to their admission into the college or during their freshman or sophomore years. However, students are not officially social work majors until they receive formal admission into the program just prior to the beginning of their junior year. During their first two years at the College students are expected to complete their 100 General Education requirements and specific program pre-requisites. In order to be eligible for acceptance into the Social Work Program students must meet the following requirements:
Completion of all 100 Level General-Education requirements and
- SOSC 101 Social Issues
- SOCI 101 Introduction to Sociology
- PSYC 101 Introduction to Psychology
- BIOL 101 Introduction to Biology (BIOL 110 or 213 may be substituted)
- ECON 102 Introduction to Macroeconomics or SWRK 202 Political Economy of Social Welfare
- SOCI 232 Sociology of the Family
Completion of the following two social work prerequisite courses with a combined average grade of B.
- SWRK 222 History and Philosophy of Social Welfare
- SWRK 225 Introduction to Social Work (which includes 80 hours of pre-professional fieldwork).
Completion of 60 academic credits
A Minimum Grade Point Average of 2.5
Application Process
Students who meet the above criteria and wish to enter the Social Work Program must file an application for admission into the Social Work Program during the Spring semester in the academic year prior to their planned entrance into the program. The application includes a personal statement, a personal/professional recommendation, a copy of an evaluation of the required pre-professional fieldwork, and academic transcripts. The Social Work Convening Group, consisting of all members of the social work
faculty, meets to discuss each candidate for admission into the program. The faculty examines each candidate’s application and academic record, including observations made by social work faculty who have taught the candidate in the prerequisite social work courses.
In addition to a student’s intellectual capacity, attention is given to the student’s personal qualities and suitability for the profession. Consideration is given to areas such as motivation and interest in social work and social work education; demonstrated aptitude through life experience; receptivity to new approaches and ideas; the ability to be self-reflective; concern for helping others
and solving social problems; the potential to form and sustain effective helping relationships with client systems; and the ability to function in an agency under supervision. The faculty may, in some cases, request a personal interview with the applicant before making its decision.
The applicant is notified by letter of the social work faculty’s decision. Students who are accepted are given instructions on how to proceed in the major. Probationary acceptance may be granted when a student’s academic performance is below the admission standards if the Social Work Convening Group feels that the student has good career potential and the ability to meet the academic requirements, if provided with remediation. Probationary acceptances include conditions that the student must meet, such as the necessity for the student to take specific remedial course work and utilizing tutoring services. Students who are admitted with probationary status are informed that they must comply with the stipulations contained in the Program’s Probation Policy. Students who are rejected for admission to the program are given the specific reasons as to why they were not accepted. Students who are denied admission into the Social Work Program may reapply at a later date.
Transfer students should consult with the Program Director as early as possible prior to applying for admission into the program.
A minor is not available.
Outcome 1: Identify as a professional social worker and conduct oneself accordingly as evidenced by students development of skills.
Outcome 2: Apply social work ethical principles to guide professional practice.
Outcome 3: Apply critical thinking to inform and communicate professional judgments. Students will be able to distinguish, appraise, and integrate multiple sources of knowledge, including research-based knowledge with practice wisdom.
Outcome 4: Engage diversity and difference in practice by recognizing the extent to which a culture’s structures and values may oppress, marginalize, alienate, or create or enhance privilege and power.
Outcome 5: Engage in research informed practice and use research evidence to inform practice.
Outcome 6: Apply knowledge of human behavior and the social environment by utilizing conceptual frameworks to guide the process of assessment, intervention, and evaluation.
- Transfer students who have 48 or more credits accepted at the time of transfer are waived from the courses marked with a (W) below. Waivers only apply to General Education Requirements NOT School Core or Major Requirements.
- Double counting between General Education, School Core, and Major may be possible. Check with your advisor to see if any apply.
- Writing Intensive Requirement (six courses): three writing intensive courses in the general education curriculum are required: First Year Seminar, Critical Reading and Writing, and Readings in the Humanities; the other three courses are taken in the major.
- Not all courses are offered each semester. Please check the current Schedule of Classes for semester course offerings.
SOCIAL WORK MAJOR
- Subject & Course # – Title & Course Description
- GENERAL EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS
- INTD 101 - FIRST YEAR SEMINAR (W)
- CRWT 102 - CRITICAL READING AND WRITING II
- AIID 201 - READINGS IN THE HUMANITIES (W)
- SELECT ONE – (W) GE-HISTORY CATEGORY: HIST 101-110
- SELECT ONE – GE-MATHEMATICS CATEGORY: MATH 101-121
- SELECT ONE – GE-SCIENCE WITH EXPERIENTIAL COMPONENT CATEGORY
- SELECT ONE – GE-INTERCULTURAL NORTH AMERICA CATEGORY
- SELECT ONE – GE-INTERNATIONAL ISSUES CATEGORY
- SELECT ONE – (W) GE-TOPICS ARTS AND HUMANITIES CATEGORY
- SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE AND HUMAN SERVICES REQUIREMENTS
- SOSC 101 - SOCIAL ISSUES
- SOSC 235 - HISTORY OF SOCIAL THOUGHT
- SUSTAINABILITY COURSE: SELECT ONE
- ENSC 325 - BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
- ENSC 327 -
- ENST 207 - PUBLIC POLICY
- ENST 209 - WORLD SUSTAINABILITY
- ENST 215 - ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY
- ENST 234 - NATURAL HISTORY AND APPLIED FIELD ECOLOGY
- ENST 312 - ECOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
- ENST 313 - APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY
- ENST 335 - ECOLOGY, SOCIETY, AND THE SACRED
- ENST 338 - SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITIES
- ENST 390 - TOPICS:
- GEOG 303 - WATER RESOURCES
- GEOG 304 - FOREST RESOURCES
- INTD 250 - SUSTAINABILITY SEMINAR
- PSYC 343 - ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
- SOCI 235 - COMPARATIVE DEVELOPMENT
- SOCI 306 - ENVIRONMENTAL SOCIOLOGY
- SOCI 309 - FOOD AND POPULATION
- SOCIAL WORK MAJOR REQUIREMENTS
- PREREQUISITES:
- SWRK 202 - POLITICAL ECONOMY OF SOCIAL WELFARE OR
- ECON 102 - INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS
- PSYC 101 - INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY
- SOCI 101 - INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY
- SOCI 232 - SOCIOLOGY OF FAMILY
- SOSC 101 - SOCIAL ISSUES
- BIOLOGY COURSE: SELECT ONE
- BIOL 101 - INTRODUCTION TO BIOLOGY
- BIOL 110 - FUNDAMENTALS OF BIOLOGY I: LECTURE AND LAB
- BIOL 213 - ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY I: LECTURE AND LAB
- SOCIAL WORK PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS:
- SWRK 222 - HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF SOCIAL WELFARE*
- SWRK 225 - INTRODUCTION TO SOCIAL WORK*
- SWRK 262 - HUMAN BEHAVIOR AND SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT I: CULTURAL DIVERSITY
- SWRK 263 -
- SWRK 307 - SOCIAL WORK RESEARCH METHODS
- SWRK 325 - THEORY AND PRACTICE OF SOCIAL WORK I **
- SWRK 326 - THEORY AND PRACTICE OF SOCIAL WORK II **
- SWRK 329 - SOCIAL WORK IN AGENCIES AND COMMUNITIES **
- SWRK 420 - CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL POLICY
- SOCIAL WORK SUGGESTED ELECTIVES:
- SWRK 210 - INTRODUCTION TO GERONTOLOGY
- SWRK 227 - CHILD WELFARE
- SWRK 324 - SOCIAL WELFARE AND LAW
- SWRK 328 - COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH
- SWRK 330 - AIDS: SOCIAL PERSPECTIVES
* Prerequisites for admission to the Social Work Program.
** Must be admitted to Social Work Program to enroll in this coursework.
Note: A 2.0 GPA in the major is required for graduation.
General Education Requirements
Four Year Plan
Graduation Requirements
Social Work Program Website
School of Social Science and Human Services Website
Faculty Profiles