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Online MSW – Advanced Standing Courses

Curriculum Details

30 TOTAL CREDITS REQUIRED*

The recovery-focused curriculum of the MSW – Advanced Standing program emphasizes the latest trends in social work while giving students a perspective based on human dignity. This year-long program includes 10 courses that are taught fully online by expert faculty. Through topics like cognitive behavioral therapies, mental health policy, and more, you’ll gain relevant, up-to-date knowledge to make positive change in your community.

*Up to two additional courses may be required based on coursework completed during your BSW program.

Core Courses

Credits

Students learn the recovery philosophy, understand the research supporting it, and practice skills to support recovery in clients.

This course critically examines the constructs of mental health and mental illness in social work practice. Mental health is conceptualized as flourishing, which can be measured, and mental illness as context-dependent clusters of symptoms defined by the DSM for use in practice settings. The course examines symptoms, theories of etiology, treatment, and prognosis in primary DSM diagnostic categories, and reviews a variety of assessment tools in the context of ethnicity, race, gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, ability, and historically oppressed and/or disadvantaged populations.

This course focuses on advanced social work, clinical, and client advocacy skills and techniques at each stage of the helping process, and with difficult practice situations as these apply to individuals, client groups, couples, and family systems. Case examples are drawn from client populations. Course content explores assessment and treatment principles from the interpersonal, psychodynamic, and cognitive-behavioral approaches.

This course addresses therapeutic work with couples, families, and groups. The focus is on the professional use of self in differentiated ways to enhance therapeutic outcomes. The course also reinforces the connections among theory, evidence-based practice, interventions, culturally appropriate, and anti-oppressive approaches to social work practice. Students are prepared to conceptualize and deliver social work services to couples, families, and groups.

Students will be guided through a sequence of learning activities to develop and refine the skills of motivational interviewing and to begin a process for developing proficiency in this method. Students will also become proficient in identifying and coding motivational interviewing skills.

This course examines cognitive approaches to social work practice, suggesting methods focusing on clients’ problem-solving abilities, building on client strengths, targeting specific thought patterns that impede clients from reaching goals, and assessing outcomes in terms of changes in thinking and behavior. Theory is applied to individuals, dyads, families, and groups.

This course facilitates student application of classroom learning in a social service agency. Students will demonstrate their practice competency in all nine CSWE areas of specialized clinical social work practice. Through this internship, students will gain an advanced perspective of professional clinical social work practice. This course prepares students to apply practice theories, models, and ethical principles in a specific social service delivery system. Students will be afforded the opportunity to apply cognitive-behavioral models and motivational interviewing techniques in work with individuals, dyads, groups, and/or families. Emphasis is placed on promoting competence through strengths-based, culturally competent, clinical social work practice.

This course covers basic content in community organizing, management, and evaluation, and prepares students to take more advanced courses in their concentration. During this course, students focus on: (1) Understanding the context of macro practice; (2) Identifying problems at the community and organizational level; (3) Organizing and building relationships within communities and organizations; and (4) Organization-based and community-based strategy making, planning, and program development. It partly surveys in nature, touching on a range of methodologies and emphases, and providing an appreciation of the historical and contemporary importance of these methods in social work.

This course is designed to prepare students in the basic principles of single-case design for clinical case evaluation and its application to social work practice in agency settings. Using both case examples and agency settings as laboratories, students will learn approaches to single-case design with attention to the value, tensions, and ambiguities related to adapting current evaluation models to agency requirements for evaluation.

This course facilitates student application of classroom learning in a social service agency. Students will demonstrate their practice competency in all nine CSWE areas of specialized clinical social work practice. Through this internship, students will gain an advanced perspective of professional clinical social work practice. This course prepares students to apply practice theories, models, and ethical principles in a specific social service delivery system. Students will be afforded the opportunity to apply cognitive-behavioral models and motivational interviewing techniques in work with individuals, dyads, groups, and/or families. Emphasis is placed on promoting competence through strengths-based, culturally competent, clinical social work practice.

To complete the program, all students must pass the cumulative exam.

Electives

Credits

This course will provide students with a theoretical, ethical and skills foundation for advanced social work practice in the field of addiction. The essentials of direct practice in the context of the structural, political and policy dimensions of addiction will be emphasized. A recovery approach, strengths-based perspective, and harm reduction orientation to addiction will be applied. The course will emphasize the perspective of people struggling with addiction, and the social responsibilities of service providers to the needs of addiction service consumers.

This course examines social work practice theories and interventions and skills as they apply to practice with child and adult survivors of physical, sexual, and other forms of abuse and trauma. Particular attention will be made to the use of engagement, assessment, planning, intervention, evaluation, and follow up. Emphasis will also be placed on diversity and use of social work ethics and values when working with survivors of abuse and trauma.

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