Social Work
Every day, millions of people struggle with disabling social or physical conditions -- an elderly widow with a broken hip, a homeless child, a substance abuser on the verge of self-destruction, for example -- affecting their ability to live independently and productively. These people need help to cope with life's challenges, and a rewarding career in social work presents the opportunity to lend vision and offer hope to those in need.
At Champlain, you'll learn to shape solutions to a wide variety of interpersonal and social problems. The Social Work program emphasizes key concepts and theories of social services delivery and helps you to develop skills and competencies to address individual and community needs. You'll build an understanding of the dynamics and consequences of all forms of human oppression and discrimination and develop the skills to promote economic and social justice with specific attention to populations at risk. Plus, you'll learn to evaluate your own professional growth and development to ensure continued professional growth.
Champlain College combines knowledge, experience and an understanding of values and ethics in applying social work practice with the interviewing, active listening, teamwork and creative problem-solving skills needed to help individuals, families and communities achieve greater self-sufficiency and healthier functioning.
Program Particulars
- Start learning social work methods your very first semester to develop a solid foundation in social services by the end of Year 2. You'll participate in the innovative E-Pal project, spending a full year mentoring a teenager in rural Vermont, helping him or her cope with the trials and tribulations of adolescence.
- In Years 3 and 4, you'll complete advanced study in social welfare issues, research methods and a second internship.
- You'll perform up to 600 hours of fieldwork in a variety of social-service agencies helping children and families, teens, or the elderly. Choose from dozens of opportunities ranging from working with emotionally disabled children to street work with drug addicts and the homeless.
- Career opportunities for Social Work graduates include serving as case managers, probation officers, nursing home activities coordinators, community organizers, live-in counselors in residential treatment facilities, and other human service occupations requiring strong communication and problem-solving skills.
- Learn from faculty with a variety of professional experiences, including those who have run an adoption agency, served in residential treatment centers, worked for child protective services, managed Vermont's Welfare-to-Work program, and counseled clients in private practice.
Student Blog: Alison Proctor
Social work student Alison Proctor is spending a semester in Mumbai, India, where she is interning at a local orphanage. She is writing all about her facsinating experiences in her blog. Check it out here!
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Program Highlights
- Start social work in the first year
- Develop knowledge and skills in social work early
- Custom designed fieldwork experience for sophomores
- Hands-on experience through senior year
- Work with field instructor to delvelop custom-designed practicum
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Curriculum
First Year
First Semester:
- COR 110 - Concepts of Self
- COR 115 - Rhetoric I
- SWK 100 - Introduction to Social Work
- SWK 110 - Social Work Methods I
- SWK 120 - Human Behavior
Second Semester:
- COR 120 - Concepts of Community
- COR 125 - Rhetorics II
- SWK 115- Social Work Methods II
- SWK 140 - Survey of Community Agencies
- PSY 135 - Developmental Psychology
Second Year
First Semester:
- COR 210 - Scientific Revolutions
- COR 220 - Aesthetic Expressions
- SWK 205 - Social Injustice in a Diverse Society
- Natural Science with Lab
- General Elective
Second Semester:
- COR 230 - The Secular & the Sacred
- COR 240 - Capitalism & Democracy
- SWK 200 - Social Work Seminar
- SWK 290 - Social Work Field Experience I
- MTH 120 - College Algebra
- General Elective
Third Year
First Semester:
- COR 310 - Globalization & Technology
- COR 320 - Globalization & Faith
- SWK 300 - Social Welfare Policies, Issues & Programs
- PSY 301 - Research Methods I
- General elective
Second Semester:
- COR 330 - CORE 9
- COR 340 - CORE 10
- PSY 302 - Research Methods II
- COM 330 - Small Group Communication
- SWK 425 - Ethics in Human Services
Fourth Year
First Semester:
- SWK 490 - Social Work Field Experience II
- SWK 495 - Social Work Field Experience III
or COR 410 - CORE 11 - SWK 470- International Social Work Seminar
- General elective
Second Semester:
- SWK 495 - Social Work Field Experience III
or COR 410 - CORE 11 - SWK 450 - Advanced Social Work Practice
- COM 350 - Conflict Management
- General Elective
BS Degree in Social Work
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