Doctor of Social Welfare (DSWSW-GS)
DSWSW-GS 4001 Philosophies of Knowledge and Mind (3 Credits)
Philosophy of Science. Differences over epistemology – the nature of
knowledge and how we come to possess it – are part and parcel of debates
over clinical theory and research methodology, whether it is the claimed
superiority of behaviorism based on positivist views or the claimed
superiority of relational psychodynamic approaches based on constructivist
accounts of knowledge. This course will consider selected topics and
controversies in philosophy of science and their application to debates
over the nature of clinical theory and research.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4002 Social Theories and their Relationship to Clinical Practice (3 Credits)
Every clinical theory presupposes an account of the nature of the mind.
Moreover, clinical theory continues to grapple with the philosophical
conundrum of the mind-body relationship. The course will review selected
topics in the philosophy of mind and the explanation of human action, and
their application to theoretical debates within the clinical literature.
Social Theories and their Relationship to Clinical Practice- Course number
4002.001
This course will examine how professional social work knowledge evolves in
the context of broader intellectual currents in philosophy and the social
sciences, including debates in epistemology, ontology, as well as political
and moral philosophy. Postmodern perspectives such as relational theories,
narrative, culture and race, second wave feminist theories, queer theories,
and social constructivism will be examined in relation to clinical practice
with vulnerable populations traditionally served by social workers.
Emphasis will be placed on the critical review of each of these theories,
particularly in relation to each other and their clinical utility and
limitations when applied to at-risk populations.
Best,
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4003 Social Work Practice Research (3 Credits)
This course will address a broad range of research methods,
including quantitative and qualitative research designs as they relate to
clinical practice. The content will be organized by reading studies
considered "landmarks" in the study of clinical social work practice from
the beginnings of the profession in the Progressive Era ("scientific
charity"). These studies will be examined both for their findings and also
for their methods of study (research designs). Since all MSW programs
require the study of research, students will be refreshed in this knowledge
by reading and critiquing these "exemplars" of such forms of study as the
case study method, survey research, experiments and quasi-experiments,
qualitative studies, single-system designs, and (currently) systematic
reviews. There will be a module on statistical reasoning that precedes or
is included in the course. Students will be able to demonstrate the ability
to read and critique published research and will also learn about the
nature of and findings from research on clinical social work practice,
identifying areas promising for future study.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4004 Contemporary Theories of Clinical Practice I (3 Credits)
This course will examine the major premises of behavior and
change that have informed clinical social work practice. The values,
assumptions, methods and research evidence for each practice theory will be
examined. The focus of this class will be on theories that were prominent
during the early and mid-twentieth century, through selections of original
contributions from the analytic, object relations, self-psychology, family
systems, behavioral and cognitive theorists.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4005 Contemporary Theories of Clinical Practice II (3 Credits)
Contemporary Theories of Clinical Practice II
Description: This course will continue to examine the major premises of
behavior change that have informed contemporary clinical social work
practice since the 1980's. The values, assumptions, methods and research
evidence for each theory will be examined. Readings representing the
interpersonal, intersubjective, emotionally–focused and behavioral health
approaches will be critically examined.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4006 Clinical Social Work and Social Policy: Past and Present Description (3 Credits)
This course will cover the history of social work in the
United States and social policies that affect it, with an emphasis on
clinical social work (direct practice), licensing and practice regulations.
It will also cover the emergence of the institutions, organizations, and
systems of care that address mental illness, developmental disabilities,
and substance use/abuse. Both traditional and Foucauldian perspectives will
be offered. Current policy issues affecting clinical social work practice
and the financing of clinical social work services will be emphasized.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4007 Publication Development I (3 Credits)
This workshop will provide students with the necessary
information in order to write a publishable paper, including the selection
of a topic, target audience, and appropriate journal, as well as the
importance of the organization of content and the review process.
Emphasis will be placed on the development of a literature review in one's
area of expertise and a publishable article based on it.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4009 Implementing Evidence Based and Evidence Informed Practices (3 Credits)
This course will examine how evidence-based and evidence-informed practices
are determined, give an overview of key evidence-based and
evidence-informed practices, and consider their impact on clinical social
work practice. Within the context of a growing emphasis on accountability
and effectiveness in the behavioral health services, the course will
explore the assumptions and values of evidence-based practice and how
research is utilized to inform direct practice. The course also will
examine the implementation of evidence-based and evidence-informed
practices in real life settings examining the role of organizational
climate, workforce competencies, policies and procedures, financing and
community factors. Quantitative, qualitative, mixed methods and
participatory research will be presented to demonstrate how these methods
can inform different aspects of implementation. The course will use
different implementation examples from behavioral health services to
discuss issues of tailoring and fidelity in practice settings. Recent
developments in implementation science and current health care policies
will also be considered to understand the broader context for the
implementation of evidence-based and evidence-informed practices.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4010 Contemporary Understandings of Human Development and Well-Being (3 Credits)
This course will consider established and emerging theories of
human development and well-being, with particular attention to attachment
and trauma. The course will also consider the historical separation of
psyche and soma, and more recent efforts to integrate the mind and body
through neuroscience research and behavioral health. Students will develop
an awareness of competing paradigms and theoretical shifts that impact
practice models.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4011 Theories of Human Rights and Social Justice (3 Credits)
Promoting social justice is a core value commitment of the social work
profession, and public defense of services to those in need of help often
involves the ability to articulate considerations of justice. Globally,
human rights become an increasingly salient part of social justice for
social workers. Yet, the nature of justice itself and its specific
relationship to clinical intervention in social work and the mental health
professions remain controversial. This course will introduce the student to
a variety of selected currently debated theories of human rights and social
justice and explore the relationship of these to mental health and to
clinical intervention as practiced by social workers. The course will also
touch on the challenge of global justice across cultures and national
boundaries, including the nature of universal human rights, in the context
of respect for alternative value systems.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: Yes
DSWSW-GS 4012 Publication Development Workshop II (3 Credits)
This workshop will continue students’ work on publishable
papers. If work is still ongoing in regard to getting the literature review
published, that will be discussed in class (e.g., dealing with editorial
feedback). Each student will also be required to start or complete a second
paper that expands on work done for a course or that is drawn from some
aspect of the student’s practice (e.g., a traditional case study or a
single system design study).
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4013 Psychopharmacology (3 Credits)
Description: The course will begin with an introduction to aspects of the
brain and genes relevant to neuropsychopharmacology, including, but not
limited to: structural and chemical neuroanatomy, genetics/ epigenetics,
neurotransmitters and neuropeptides, receptors and transporters, signal
transduction, psychoneuroendocrinology and the brain-immune system, etc.
The basics of psychopharmacology including an introduction to
pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics will be covered. We will then study
the primary classes of psychopharmacological agents: antipsychotics, mood
stabilizers, antidepressants, anxiolytics, sedative-hypnotics (sleep
medications), psychostimulants, medications for substance use disorders,
etc. We will also briefly review the other "somatic" therapies in
psychiatry, e.g., vagus nerve stimulation, deep brain stimulation, ECT and
rTMS. We will discuss the emerging field of psychodynamic
psychopharmacology.We will also address salient ethical and cultural
factors in psychopharmacology. In brief, we will approach the complex field
of neuropsychopharmacology through the multiple lenses of genome/
epigenome, brain, mind and culture.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4014 Trauma-Informed Treatment and Treatment of the Addictions (3 Credits)
The first half of this course will provide an
overview of trauma, including responses to trauma, the neuroscience of
trauma, assessment, and the types of traumatic events such as natural and
man-made disasters, sexual and physical abuse, and adult-onset trauma.
Relevant theoretical and evidence-supported treatment models will be
discussed in relation to specific types of trauma. The importance of
clinician responses to direct and indirect exposure will be discussed,
including secondary and shared trauma responses. Case material will be used
to illustrate core components of trauma-informed care, application of
specific models, and the impact of trauma on client-clinician interactions.
The use and abuse of substances and addiction to alcohol and other drugs,
as well as behavioral addictions such as gambling, are pervasive among
social work clients. This part of the course will provide an overview of
the scope of addictive problems, their impact on individuals, families and
communities, the various etiological formulations, including the role of
neurobiology, family and social factors, and become familiar with the
latest in evidence-based interventions that can be utilized by social
workers in clinical settings.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4016 Adaptive Leadership for Organizational Change (3 Credits)
This course will support DSW students in human services organizations to
build the knowledge and skills to be effective leaders in directing staff
and programs as well as overall organizational management. In order to
adapt to the continued challenges posed by changing social policies and
accountability to communities, leaders need to be adept at assuming a vast
array of responsibilities.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4017 Teaching and Learning in Social Work (3 Credits)
People learn in various ways: visual, auditory, and
experiential. This course addresses the various models of adult learning
and cognitive development, especially in regard to fostering students’
critical thinking and problem-solving strategies. Students will learn the
components necessary to the development of their teaching philosophy and
portfolio as it pertains to teaching the integration of theory and practice
of social work. This course should be taken concurrently with the teaching
internship.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4019 Teaching or Field Based Learning Internships (3 Credits)
A choice of one of these internships will be required and will
be taken concurrently with the teaching or supervision class respectively.
Current teaching at a CSWE accredited graduate or undergraduate program is
acceptable, as is current supervisory work in an agency-based setting.
Individualized learning plans will be developed for each internship and
students will be evaluated on the achievement of these learning goals and
their ability to reflect upon the internship experience productively for
their continuing professional development.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4020 Publication Development Workshop III (3 Credits)
This course will focus on continuing work on papers for
publication and the beginning processes of compiling the final portfolio
needed for graduation. Work will focus on the status of students’
scholarship and effective strategies that need to be taken to ensure
publication in their respective areas of expertise. Students will also
learn about the importance of disseminating one’s work to a professional
audience, and the steps that need to be taken to present professionally,
including identification of a professional venue, abstract preparation and
submission, and organizing of material for presentation.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4021 Capstone (2.5 Credits)
During the capstone course, students will present their completed
portfolios to their committees. The scheduled presentations of the work
with questions asked about it will be open to all of the Program's students
and faculty. In addition to successfully presenting and defending their own
work, each student will be required to attend at least three other
"defenses" and to write a brief evaluation of each presentation they
attend. In addition to providing a forum for evaluating individual work,
this capstone course will prepare students for conference presentations and
for participating in other peer review processes.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4022 Power, Privilege, and Oppression in Clinical Social Work (3 Credits)
This course will examine the role power, privilege, and oppression play in
clinical social work practice and education. Grounded in theories of
critical consciousness, critical race theory, and anti-oppression, this
course will engage students in a close examination of topics related to
white supremacy, equity and inclusion, and social action. Particular
attention will be paid to the current US and global sociopolitical climate.
This course aims to prepare students to be critically aware leaders in the
field, educators in the classroom, and lifelong learners around matters of
power, privilege, and oppression.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4024 Trauma and Attachment (3 Credits)
This course will examine how trauma impacts infants, toddlers, children,
adolescents, adults and the elderly. It will explore the research of
experts in both the areas of trauma and attachment, as well as, the nexus
between the two. It will discuss the most recent neuroscience in how trauma
affects the brain and the biological, psychological and social sequelae
that follow. Cutting edge treatment models will be reviewed and their
application to clinical social work practice will be discussed.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4025 Adaptive Leadership for Organizational Change II:Applications in Human Services (3 Credits)
Every day we see significant challenges playing themselves out at the
local, national and global levels. Despite the considerable human energy
devoted and financial resources spent, it could be argued that we are not
making the kind of progress or affecting the kind of community change that
is possible. This is not to say that progress has been completely elusive.
Inspiring change agents and organizations have emerged and much suffering
has been alleviated. Yet, one could argue that these very organizations get
bogged down in internal and external challenges that prevent them from
doing their best work, and imperative social change is slowed as a result.
A key premise of the course is that leadership requires helping communities
and organizations make the adaptations needed to thrive and survive in
rapidly changing contexts. Effective management must be deployed to
preserve successful institutional behaviors whereas leadership is needed to
ensure that practices no longer serving organizational or community
interests are discarded and that new innovations are pursued to generate
greater impact. However, such adaptive work can be extremely challenging
when longstanding practices are hardwired into the DNA of organizations
through years and even decades of practice. In this context, the work of
leadership is about accompanying people through the realities and losses of
necessary change
while opening them up to the promise of the future.
This course builds upon the first course in providing students with the
opportunity to develop their own strategies for executing change in their
organizations, to recognize, diagnose, and respond appropriately to complex
environments and situations, to contribute to innovation around processes
and services and foster an experimental mindset in the organization. This
course is focused on the application of adaptive leadership concepts in
students' organizational contexts. Through case presentations and case
consultations, students will engage in deepening their leadership practice.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4026 The Role of School Social Workers in the Micro, Mezzo and Macro Relationships of the Depart of Educ (3 Credits)
Students spend more waking hours in school than any other place. Therefore, school social workers are at the forefront of intervening with many mental health issues of students, as well as complex traumas with families. This elective will focus on the micro, mezzo and macro issues in the New York City School System. School social workers bear witness and address multi-disparities that students in our system experience, including, but not limited to, housing and food insecurity,
rise in suicidal ideation, violence with the NYPD, interactions with ICE
and family member deportations, poverty and daily trauma. Schools are
closely linked and required to partner with many other systems in our city,
including hospitals, mental health organizations, NYPD, and ACS. This
course will first address the challenges we see within the school system
and the partnership with school social workers and then address the
systemic changes we can make in the required outside partnerships,
including, but not limited to, mental health resources, NYPD, and ACS.
Finally, this class will closely address the segregation and racism in the
NYC School System and strategies to create systemic change.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4027 DSW Applied Research (3 Credits)
This seminar course will guide students through an applied research process
where they look to find practical solutions to challenges, gaps, or unmet
needs in social work practice, leadership, and pedagogy while incorporating
a social justice and racial equity lens. The course will examine a broad
range of research methodologies in support of rigorous scientific study of
a topical area of interest related to the students' clinical practice. As
such, students will use the course to: 1) identify a suitable topic of
interest, 2) develop a problem statement and conceptualize clear research
questions within the topic, 3) establish a theoretical framework/conceptual
model highlighting evidence-based approach to addressing the research
questions, and 4) finally select appropriate methods. Students will work
towards the development of two publishable papers. Students are also
encouraged to consider topics of interest aligned with their Capstone
Projects. Similarly, suitable topics may include a comprehensive literature
review, the development, extension, or critique of relevant practice models
or processes, a theoretical concept and its application to clinical
practice, application or illustration of specific interventions, or a
critical review of emerging approaches, pedagogy or training techniques and
processes.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4028 Philanthropy and Strategic Resource Mobilization (3 Credits)
All social work activity, organizations, and initiatives require resources
to carry out their aims. This course provides an overview of resource
mobilization and the world of philanthropy and fundraising and places such
in the context of leadership for the field. Thinking and acting
strategically and reflectively as leaders, and then aligning and mobilizing
resources to advance social work aims is a core theme of the course, which
will include: 1) a conceptual examination of the notions of "resources" and
"philanthropy", 2) a consideration of the interplay between leadership and
resource mobilization, and 3) a specific focus on philanthropic strategies,
tactics and skills.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4029 Mastering Professional Presentation Skills in Social Work (3 Credits)
This innovative course is tailored for doctoral students in the clinical social work program. Students will embark on a transformative journey to enhance their instructional abilities and expand their presentation skills by exploring a variety of cutting-edge platforms and techniques available. The primary objective of this course is to equip students with advanced proficiency in creating impactful presentations and podcasts. Through a combination of theoretical insights, practical exercises, and constructive feedback, participants will learn how to effectively communicate complex social work concepts in innovative ways. By exploring diverse presentation formats and multimedia tools, students will discover how to captivate and inspire their audience while presenting new information within the social work field. Additionally, this course will provide dedicated support to students as they prepare for their capstone presentations. Through guided sessions on organizing thoughts, crafting compelling narratives, and leveraging available platforms, students will develop the skills necessary to deliver successful capstone presentations showcasing their research work and potential papers with professional excellence.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No
DSWSW-GS 4040 Independent Study (3 Credits)
Students may engage in individual study in selected curriculum
areas under special circumstances. The independent work is approved if the
student furnishes evidence of mastery of the basic content in the social
work area selected. The work done by the student in this course is carried
out with the guidance of a member of the full-time faculty.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: Yes
DSWSW-GS 4041 Independent Study (3 Credits)
Students may engage in individual study in selected curriculum
areas under special circumstances. The independent work is approved if the
student furnishes evidence of mastery of the basic content in the social
work area selected. The work done by the student in this course is carried
out with the guidance of a member of the full-time faculty.
Grading: Grad Silver Pass/Fail
Repeatable for additional credit: No