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SW 695A - Social Work Practicum I Units: 4 Students in Practicum courses are assigned to community-based placements applying the knowledge, skills, and values learned within program courses. Practicum education is guided by an individualized learning contract developed by the student and the practicum instructor.
Prerequisites: M.S.W. major. Possible Instructional Methods: Hybrid or Online-Synchronous. Grading: CR/NC grading only. Course Typically Offered: Fall ONLY
Student Learning Outcomes - Upon successful completion of this course students will be able to:
- Students will demonstrate an introductory understanding of social work ethics and values (PLO: Values and Ethics).
- Students will demonstrate an ability to assess their own learning needs and styles, and begin to embrace their responsibility for the development of professional competence and identity (PLO: Professional Use of Self).
- Students will be introduced to the process of supervision and establish an understanding of the use of self in interviewing, assessment, engagement, planning, intervention and evaluation phases of evidence-based practice with individuals and families (PLOs: Professional Use of Self; Communication)
- Students will become familiar with their professional roles as mandated reporters and the concomitant responsibilities (PLO: Professional Use of Self).
- Students will gain an initial understanding of the processes of critical thinking, problem solving, decision-making, and interactive skills as used in a professional strength-based social work practice, within an urban, community-based context (PLO: Critical Thinking/Applying Theory to Practice).
- Students will develop initial applied skills using a generalist practice perspective, such as interviewing, documentation, assessment, engagement, planning, intervention and evaluation (PLO: Critical Thinking/Applying Theory to Practice).
- Students will begin to apply theoretical frameworks studied in the core foundation courses to their initial cases, interventions, and agency observations (PLO: Critical Thinking/Applying Theory to Practice).
- Students will begin to understand the concept of cultural competence by working with individuals from different cultural backgrounds. Students will work with cultural groups other than their own (PLOs: Professional Use of Self, Communication, Diversity).
- Students will explore roles of advocate and broker for vulnerable populations, in the context of a philosophy that values self-determination and empowerment (PLOs: Advocacy; Diversity).
- Students will demonstrate their communication and writing skills in seminar, as well as learn to maintain organized and timely documentation in their agency placements (PLOs: Communication; Critical Thinking/Applying Theory to Practice).
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