Associate Professors--Glugoski, Hyde, Levy, Takahashi
Assistant Professors--Hayashi, McGill
Master of Social Work
Our graduates render direct services to people in need and, as administrators and organizers of social welfare agencies, make services more accessible and responsive to the communities they serve.
The Bachelor of Arts in Social Work and the Master of Social Work at San Francisco State University are fully accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE).
To enter the baccalaureate major, students must complete Segments I and II of the General Education curriculum or their equivalent at another college and have junior standing at the university. They are also required to have completed with a grade of C or better introductory courses in human biology, economics, psychology, and sociology. Freshmen and sophomores should consult with a school adviser before enrolling in courses which fulfill General Education requirements.
In both the B.A. and M.S.W. programs, the curriculum emphasizes the integration of knowledge, values, and skills. Commitment to professional values and ethics, to participate in constructive change, to support the right to self-determination, and to respect people's capacity to learn and grow are integrated throughout the program. Students are expected to develop a spirit of inquiry and to achieve a critical posture toward the social situation, the functioning of the profession and of social agencies, and their own performance. Practice is to be founded on a liberal arts perspective, particularly on the interaction of two dimensions: knowledge of human and social behavior, which is utilized analytically in professional relationships; and salient and comparable knowledge of the array of functions, roles, and practice skills available to the profession of social work. Particular attention is paid to the impact of class, race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, age, and culture.
The school offers the Master of Social Work through both full-time and part-time programs. The curriculum is designed to meet the following six areas mandated by the Council of Social Work Education: Social Welfare Policies and Services; Human Behavior and the Social Environment; Social Work Methods; Ethnic and Cultural Concepts; Research in Social Work; and Field Instruction. The full-time program requires two academic years with at least one year in full-time residence on this campus.
The part-time M.S.W. program is open to applicants who meet all university requirements and, in addition, are employed full-time in a recognized human services agency or community organization. By utilizing certain aspects of their employment as a field work placement, students are able to retain their jobs and complete the M.S.W. curriculum in two and one-half to four years.
The part-time M.S.W. program, therefore, is designed specifically to provide educational opportunities for students whose financial and family responsibilities make the two year full-time M.S.W. program impossible. It is based on a planned educational program developed by students and their advisers and related to their past and current experiences in the human services area, educational objectives, and personal career goals. The program requires a commitment on the part of the student's host agency to provide the educational components of a field placement. The reference letter submitted by the agency executive on application is reviewed with this criterion in mind.
Students may enter either the full-time or part-time program having completed a number of courses in the school or in other M.S.W. programs. Students cannot, however, enter Phase III of the part-time program immediately. Decisions on transfer of credit are made only after one semester of matriculated credit is completed.
Graduates of the Master of Social Work program are prepared for advanced level professional positions in both public and private social welfare agencies and community organizations. Subject to the laws of the State of California, M.S.W. graduates are eligible to take the examination to become a licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in two years after graduation. They are also eligible to take social work licensing examinations in other states. In addition, to prepare for advanced level professional practice, M.S.W. graduates go on to doctoral programs in social work/social welfare and in related fields such as public policy, public health, gerontology, psychology, and education, and to law schools.
All undergraduate social work courses, except S W 350 and S W 301, are restricted to junior and senior majors during touch tone registration. Registration is opened to non-majors during the first two weeks of classes, during which time students may enroll with consent of instructor and on a space available basis.
Prerequisites:completion of all GE Segment I and II requirements, including courses in human biology, macroeconomics, psychology, and sociology with a grade of C or better.
Courses for this discipline are listed in alphabetical sequence (consult the Index for page reference). NOTE:SW 503 and 505 enrollment requires consent of field director.
Units
SW 300 U.S. Social Welfare I: Past,
Present, and Future 3
SW 302 Introduction to Social Service
Organizations 2
SW 352 Gender, Sexism, and Social
Welfare 3
SW 400 Social Work Practice I 3
SW 410 Human Development and the
Social Services 3
Total 14
SW 301 U.S. Social Welfare II: Problems,
Policies, and Programs 3
SW 401 Social Work Practice II 3
SW 402 Interviewing Skills in Social Work 3
SW 470 Social Differences and Social Work
Practice 3
Total 12
SW 350 Child Welfare (may be taken in
Spring Semester, Senior Year) 3
SW 450 Introduction to Research in Social
Work 3
SW 502 Seminar on Field Work Experience I 2
SW 503 Field Experience in the Social
Services I 2
Total 10
SW 456 Urban Community Organizing 3
SW 504 Seminar on Field Work
Experience II 2
SW 505 Field Experience in the Social
Services II 2
Total 7
Total for major 43
Applications are made initially through the university graduate admissions office, and then forwarded to the School of Social Work. The school will send the applicant its own application and a request for additional information and materials necessary for school judgment on admissibility. Admission to both the full-time and part-time program is competitive.
The school evaluation is based upon prior academic performance; potential for professional practice as demonstrated by previous employment/volunteer experiences; and knowledge and relationship of the applicant to oppressed and disadvantaged individuals, groups, and communities. In addition, the selection process considers the congruence of the educational objectives of individual applicants with the urban focus of the school. The significance of a baccalaureate degree from an accredited undergraduate program in social work is recognized, but applicants with a B.S.W. degree are not given advanced standing.
Courses for this discipline are listed in alphabetical sequence (consult Index for page reference). NOTE:SW 740 enrollment requires consent of field director.
Units
SW 700 History and Philosophy of Social
Welfare 3
SW 701 Social Policy Analysis 3
SW 710 Human Behavior and the Social
Environment 3
SW 720 Research Methods in Social Work 3
SW 721 Seminar: Evaluative Research
Methods in Social Work or
SW 820 Seminar: Advanced Research
Methodology in Social Work 2
SW 730 Social Work Practice Methods 3
SW 740 Field Work Instruction (two
semesters) 4
SW 741 Graduate Field Seminar 2
SW 770 Ethnic and Cultural Concepts and
Principles I 3
SW 771 Ethnic and Cultural Concepts and
Principles II 3
SW 895 Research Project in Social Work or
SW 898 Master's Thesis 3
Minimum core units 32
Program emphasis total (one area chosen from
the emphases listed below) 28
Minimum total 60
Units
SW 810 Health, Illness, and Disordered
Behavior 3
SW 740 Field Work Instruction (two
semesters) 6
SW 741 Graduate Field Seminar1 2
SW 800 Planning and Program Develop-
ment or
SW 801 Change Strategies and Professional
Values or
SW 835 Social Development Methods I or
SW 850 Human Services Administration I 3
SW 830 Seminar: Social Casework 3
SW 832 Seminar: Social Group Work 3
SW 831 Seminar: Advanced Social Case-
work or
SW 833 Seminar: Advanced Social Group
Work 3
Electives on advisement 5
Minimum emphasis units 28
Units
SW 740 Field Work Instruction (two
semesters) 6
SW 741 Graduate Field Seminar 2
SW 800 Planning and Program Development 3
SW 811 Organizations, Institutions, and
Communities 3
SW 850 Human Services Administration I 3
SW 864 Human Services Administration II 3
SW 880 Computer Utilization in Human
Services Administration 2
Electives on advisement 6
Minimum emphasis units 28
Units
SW 740 Field Work Instruction (two
semesters) 6
SW 741 Graduate Field Seminar1 2
SW 800 Planning and Program Development 3
SW 801 Change Strategies and Professional
Values 3
SW 811 Organizations, Institutions, and
Communities 3
SW 835 Seminar: Social Development
Methods I 3
SW 836 Seminar: Social Development
Methods II 3
Electives on advisement 5
Minimum emphasis units 28
The PPSC field placement and specialized course work are designed to be completed in the second year of MSW preparation and are taken in the following order.
Units
SW 741 Graduate Field Seminar 3
SW 855 School Social Work 3
SW 741 Graduate Field Seminar 3