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You are in the official 2000-2001 General Catalog
for California State University, Fresno.
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B.A. in Social
Work
M.S.W., Master of Social Work
Certificate in Alcohol/Drug Studies
Certificate in
Cross-Cultural Competency
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G. "Vishu" Visweswaran, Chair
Undergraduate Advisers: James E. Aldredge, David L. Ellis, Sudarshan Kapoor,
Serge C. Lee, Richard O. Salsgiver, Jane Yamaguchi
Serge C. Lee, Richard O. Salsgiver; Graduate Advisers: All full-time faculty
Andrew J. Alvarado, Frederick W. Childers, Benjamin Cuellar, John B.
Franz, Betty Garcia, Mark G. Hanna, Donna L. Hardina, Debra Harris, M. Lynn
Jacobsson, Mitzi Lowe
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The profession of social work is dedicated to meeting the diverse social
service needs of special populations of individuals, families, groups, organizations,
and communities. As a practice oriented profession, social work deals with
social concerns that range from societal oppression to people's emotional/behavioral
problems. The social work practitioner helps at risk populations which typically
include the poor and homeless, abused/neglected children and adults, people
of color, women, recent refugees, chronically mentally ill, developmentally
disabled, physically ill or disabled, substance abusers, criminal offenders,
and the aged.
In focusing on disadvantaged groups, social workers use a range of traditional
and nontraditional methods to promote well-being, personal growth, and social
justice, e.g., client and systems policy advocating, brokering, consulting
individual, family, and group counseling/psychotherapy, mediating, researching,
supervising, and teaching.
While the discipline of social work is deeply rooted in a rich, 100-year
history of service, what social workers "do" is no longer traditionally
defined. The role of the social worker is constantly expanding into innovative
service fields wherever a compassionate response to human need is indicated.
The Department of Social Work Education offers two degree programs to educate
beginning and advanced social work practitioners who can meet complex client
needs within a diversity of public and private human service settings and
who can perform in a variety of roles using multiple social work practice
methodologies. The Bachelor of Arts degree program prepares students for
beginning generalist social work practice as well as for graduate study
in the human service field, including social work. The Master of Social
Work prepares the learner for autonomous social work practice at multiple
levels of intervention as well as for doctoral study in social work and
related human service arenas. Both the B.A. and the M.S.W. programs are
accredited by the Council on Social Work Education.
The faculty of the department represent a wide spectrum of theoretical
orientations and approaches to professional social work practice. All have
substantive practice experience and many have extensive research and social
policy interests. In addition to the on-campus facilities of the university,
the department uses the San Joaquin Valley's unique urban-rural configuration
of people, agribusiness and social-political institutions, and the accompanying
host of social service needs as the setting for in-the-field learning. Numerous
public and private social service agencies in our region make their facilities
and professional social work staff available for the internship/practicum
element of the department's program. A representative sample of these settings
include: Atascadero State Hospital; California State Department of Corrections,
Human Resources Development, Social Services, Youth Authority; Fresno Community
Hospital; St. Agnes Hospital; Valley Children's Hospital; Veterans Administration
Hospital; Vietnam Outreach Center; and Area Agency on Aging. Internship/practicum
experiences are also available in the schools, as well as the mental health,
probation, and social services departments in the counties of Fresno, Kings,
Madera, and Tulare.
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Graduates from the B.A. program typically find employment as social workers
in county or state departments of social services; private agencies offering
individual, group, or community services; poverty and mental health programs;
social rehabilitation programs; human resources development programs for
services to the handicapped, aged, and special population groups, medical
and hospital programs, correctional programs, primary, secondary and higher
education settings, and employee assistance programs in businesses and governmental
agencies.
M.S.W. graduates can expect to hold additionally responsible but more advanced
clinical, case management, training, administrative, program development
or policy making/administrative positions in a broad spectrum of human service
organizations.
The U.S. Department of Labor Occupational Outlook Handbook 1994-95
projects the employment of social workers to increase faster than the average
for all occupations through the year 2005 in response to the needs of a
growing and aging population, especially in the Central California region.
Special mention must be made regarding increased job opportunities in child
welfare, mental health, substance abuse programs, school systems, and services
for the elderly, as well as increased opportunities in rural areas.