2009-2010 Graduate Catalog (inactive) [Archived Catalog]
Department of Social Work
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Margaret Tynan, Ph.D., Chair
Office: Demergasso-Bava Hall — DBH 122
Phone: (209) 667-3091
Professors: Floyd, Garcia, Marques, Tynan
Associate Professor: Tibrewal
Assistant Professors: Breshears, E., Leyva, Ringstad
Graduate Programs in the Department of Social Work:
Master of Social Work (MSW)
Learning Objectives
FOUNDATION
Graduate social workers who:
- Apply critical thinking skills to professional social work practice.
- Understand and are guided by the values and ethics of the profession.
- Demonstrate the ability to practice without discrimination and with respect, knowledge, and skills related to diverse client populations.
- Advocate for social justice by understanding and working to expose paradigms of oppression and discrimination and those mechanisms and structures that serve those paradigms.
- Understand the history of social work profession and utilize this knowledge as a context for understanding and addressing current practice issues.
- Engage clients to assess and intervene at all system levels using a generalist perspective that incorporates client strengths.
- Apply theoretical frameworks supported by research to understand individual development and behavior across the life span, between individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities.
- Analyze, formulate, and influence social policies and understand the integral relationship between policy and practice.
- Use research to inform and continually update practice.
- Use supervision, consultation, and continuing education to strengthen practice.
- Understand and operate within organizational structures and service delivery systems and seek necessary change.
- Use communication skills differentially across client populations, colleagues, and communities.
- Carry out critical self-analysis and self evaluation.
ADVANCED
Graduate social workers who:
- Engage in autonomous practice that is highly differentiated, discriminating, ethical, and self-critical using the integrative practice approach.
- Apply and promote paradigms of social and economic justice and liberation to continually advance the larger social work profession and refind the quality of their own practice.
- Demonstrate a spirit of inquiry characterized by curiosity and a motivation to learn about others whose lives are different from one’s own and the strengths utilized by those individuals and groups.
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