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B1.1 This document sets forth the official curriculum
policy for the accreditation of baccalaureate (BSW) programs of
social work education by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE).
It supersedes all prior statements of curriculum policy for the
baccalaureate program level.
B1.2 The curriculum policy statement establishes
mandated for minimum requirements for the curricula of baccalaureate
programs to be accredited by Council. The policy statement specifies
certain content areas and requires that they be logically related
to each other, to the purposes and values of social work as set
forth in this document, and to the purposes, mission, resources,
and educational context of each professional program. The statement
does not prescribe any particular curriculum design.
B1.3 Each program is responsible for making every
faculty member, student, field instructor, and administrator associated
with the program aware of the content of the Curriculum Policy Statement.
B2.1 The Commission on Accreditation of Council develops
standards by which social work education programs are evaluated
for accreditation. These standards pertain to the organization,
administration, and curriculum implementation of programs of social
work education. Curriculum standards are derived from and must conform
with this Curriculum Policy Statement.
B3.1 The purpose of social work education is to prepare
competent and effective social work professionals who are committed
to practice that includes services to the poor and oppressed, and
who work to alleviate poverty, oppression, and discrimination.
B3.2 Social Work education is based upon a specific
body of knowledge, values, and professional skills. It is grounded
in the profession's history and philosophy. Education for the profession
promoted the development and advancement of knowledge, practice
skills, and services that further the well being of people and promote
social and economic justice. Social work education is responsible
for the production and application of research and scholarship aimed
at advancing social work practice.
B3.3 Programs of social work education are offered
at the baccalaureate, master's, and doctoral levels. Doctoral programs
are not accredited by the Council.
B3.4 Programs of social work education maintain close,
reciprocal, and ongoing relationships with social work practitioners
and with groups and organizations that promote, provide, or seek
to influence social policies and social work services. Responsibility
for initiating these relationships rests with social work education
programs. Effective programs develop and maintain systematic communication
with these individuals and groups.
B3.5 The effectiveness of any profession depends
on the active engagement of its members in continuous learning.
Programs of social work education strive to promote continuing professional
development of students and faculty. Programs seek to teach students
how to become lifelong learners who are motivated to continue developing
new knowledge and skills throughout their careers.
B3.6 Effective social work education programs recognize
the interdependence of nations and the need for worldwide professional
cooperation.
B3.7 Social work education programs assume a leadership
role within the profession by offering curricula that are at the
forefront of the new and changing knowledge base of social work
and its supporting disciplines.
B4.1 The profession of social work is committed to
the enhancement of human well-being and to the alleviation of poverty
and oppression. The social work profession receives its sanction
from public and private auspices and is the primary profession in
the provision of social services. Within its general scope of concern,
professional social work is practiced in a wide variety of settings.
It has four related purposes:
B4.1.1 The promotion, restoration, maintenance and
enhancement of the functioning individuals, families, groups, organizations,
and communities by helping them to accomplish tasks, prevent and
alleviate distress, and use resources;
B4.1.2 The planning, formulation, and implementation
of social policies, services, resources, and programs needed to
meet basic human needs and support the development of human capacities;
B4.1.3 The pursuit of policies, services, resources
and programs through organizational or administrative advocacy and
social or political action, to empower groups at risk and to promote
social and economic justice.
B4.1.4 The development and testing of professional
knowledge and skills related to these purposes.
B5.1 The purpose of professional social work education
is to enable students to integrate the knowledge, values, and skills
of the social work profession into competent practice. The achievement
of this purpose requires clarity about learning objectives and expected
student outcomes, flexibility in programming and teaching to accommodate
a diverse student population, and commitment of sufficient time
and resources to their education.
B5.2 Two levels of social work education are accredited
by the Council on Social Work Education; the baccalaureate and the
master's. The baccalaureate level prepares students for generalist
social work practice, and the master's level prepares students for
advanced social work practice in an area of concentration. These
levels of education differ from each other in the depth, breadth,
and specificity of knowledge and skill that students are expected
to synthesize and apply in practice.
Both levels of social work education must provide
a professional foundation curriculum that contains the common body
of the profession's knowledge, values, and skills. This common base
is transferable among settings, population groups, and problem areas.
The baccalaureate level of social work education must include a
liberal arts perspective and the professional foundation content,
which prepares students for direct services with client systems
of various sizes and types.
B5.3 Professional social work education at the baccalaureate
level takes place in accredited baccalaureate degree granting colleges
and universities.
B5.4 All baccalaureate social work programs must:
B5.4.1 Provide content about social work practice
with client systems of various sizes and types.
B5.4.2 Prepare graduates to practice with diverse
populations.
B5.4.3 Provide content about the social contexts
of social work practice, the changing nature of those contexts,
the behavior of organizations, and the dynamics of change.
B5.4.4 Infuse throughout the curriculum the values
and ethics that guide professional social workers in their practice.
B5.4.5 Prepare graduates who are aware of their responsibility
to continue their professional growth and development.
B5.5 The baccalaureate curriculum must be based upon
a liberal arts perspective and must include the professional foundation.
B5.6 The baccalaureate curriculum must be developed
and organized as a coherent and integrated whole.
B5.7 Graduates of a baccalaureate social work program
will be able to:
B5.7.1 Apply critical thinking skills within the
context of professional social work practice;
B5.7.2 Practice within the values and ethics of the
social work profession and with an understanding of the respect
for the positive value of diversity;
B5.7.3 Demonstrate the professional use of self;
B5.7.4 Understand the forms and mechanisms of oppression
and discrimination and the strategies of change that advance social
and economic justice;
B5.7.5 Understand the history of the social work
profession and its current structures and issues;
B5.7.6 Apply the knowledge and skills of generalist
social work to practice with systems of all sizes;
B5.7.7 Apply knowledge of bio-psycho-social variables
that affect individual development and behavior, and use theoretical
frameworks to understand the interactions among individuals and
between individuals and social systems (i.e., families, groups,
organizations, and communities);
B5.7.8 Analyze the impact of social policies on client
systems, workers, and agencies;
B5.7.9 Evaluate research studies and apply findings
to practice, and, under supervision, to evaluate their own practice
interventions and those of other relevant systems;
B5.7.10 Use communication skills differentially with
variety of client populations, colleagues, and members of the community;
B5.7.11 Use supervision appropriate to generalist
practice;
B5.7.12 Function within the structure of organizations
and service delivery systems, and under supervision, seek necessary
organizational change.
B5.8 A liberal arts perspective enriches understanding
of the person-environment context of professional social work practice
and is integrally related to the mastery of social work content.
The baccalaureate professional program in social work is built upon
a liberal arts perspective.
B5.9 A liberal arts perspective provides an understanding
of one's cultural heritage in the context of other cultures; the
methods and limitations of various systems of inquiry; and the knowledge,
attitudes, ways of thinking, and means of communication that are
characteristic of a broadly educated person. Students must be capable
of thinking critically about society, about people and their problems,
and about expressions of culture such as art, literature, science,
history ,and philosophy. Students must have direct knowledge of
social, psychological, and biological determinants of human behavior
and of diverse cultures, social conditions, and social problems.
B5.10 Determination of whether students have acquired
a liberal arts perspective is left to the judgment of each social
work program's faculty. Each program must clearly explicate the
requirements for training in a liberal arts perspective and the
rationale for those requirements.
B6.1 The baccalaureate curriculum must include a
liberal arts perspective and the professional foundation. The professional
foundation includes content on social work values and ethics, diversity,
social and economic justice, populations-at-risk, human behavior
and the social environment, social welfare policy and services,
social work practice, research, and the field practicum. Baccalaureate
programs must achieve integration among these professional content
areas. Curriculum areas do not need to be taught in discrete courses,
but mastery of the professional curriculum must occur through classroom
experiences and field practice. The Baccalaureate Social Work curriculum
must cover, but is not necessarily limited to, the professional
foundation.
B6.2 The curriculum design of each program must identify
a coherent approach for the selection of research and theories offered.
Every part of the baccalaureate curriculum must strengthen the student's
understanding and appreciation of a scientific, analytic approach
to building knowledge of the delivery and evaluation of practice.
Content provided in each curricular area must be relevant to the
objectives, philosophy, and mission of the individual program and
must facilitate the student's understanding of how the knowledge
relates to social work practice.
B6.3 Programs of social work education must provide
specific knowledge about social work values and their ethical implications
and must provide opportunities for students to demonstrate their
application in professional practice. Students must be assisted
to develop an awareness of their personal values and to clarify
conflicting values and ethical dilemmas. Among the values and principles
that must be infused throughout every social work curriculum are
the following:
B6.3.1 Social workers' professional relationships
are built on regard for individual worth and dignity, and advance
by mutual participation, acceptance, confidentiality, honesty, and
responsible handling of conflict.
B6.3.2 Social workers respect individual's right
to make independent decisions and to participate actively in the
helping process.
B6.3.3 Social workers are committed to assisting
client systems to obtain needed resources.
B6.3.4 Social workers strive to make social institutions
more humane and responsive to human needs.
B6.3.5 Social workers demonstrate respect for and
acceptance of the unique characteristics of diverse populations
B6.3.6 Social workers are responsible for their own
ethical conduct, the quality of their practice, and seeking continuous
growth in the knowledge and skills of their profession.
B6.4 Professional social work education is committed
to preparing students to understand and appreciate human diversity.
Programs must provide curriculum content about differences and similarities
in the experiences, needs, and beliefs of people. The curriculum
must include content about differential assessment and intervention
skills that will enable practitioners to serve diverse populations.
Each program is required to include content about
population groups that are particularly relevant to the program's
mission. These include, but are not limited to, groups distinguished
by race, ethnicity, culture, class, gender, sexual orientation,
religion, physical or mental ability, age, and national origin.
B6.5 Programs of social work education must provide
an understanding of the dynamics and consequences of social and
economic justice, including all forms of human oppression and discrimination.
They must provide students with the skills to promote social change
and to implement a wide range of interventions that advance the
achievement of individual and collective social and economic justice.
Theoretical and practice content must be provided about strategies
of intervention for achieving social and economic justice and for
combating the causes and effects of institutionalized forms of oppression.
B6.6 Programs of social work education must present
theoretical and practice content about patterns, dynamics, and consequences
of discrimination, economic deprivation, and oppression. The curriculum
must provide content about people of color, women, and gay and lesbian
persons. Such content must emphasize the impact of discrimination,
economic deprivation, and oppression upon these groups.
Each program must include content about populations-at-risk
that are particularly relevant to its mission. In addition to those
mandated above, such groups include, but are not limited to, those
distinguished by age, ethnicity, culture, class, religion, and physical
or mental ability.
B6.7 Programs of social work education must provide
content about theories and knowledge about the range of social systems
in which individuals live (families, groups, organizations, institutions,
and communities). The human behavior and the social environment
curriculum must provide an understanding of the interactions between
and among human biological, social psychological, and cultural systems
as they affect and are affected by human behavior. The impact of
social and economic forces on individuals and social systems must
be presented. Content must be provided about the ways in which systems
promote or deter people in maintaining or achieving optimal health
and well-being. Content about values and ethical issues related
to bio-psycho-social theories must be included. Students must be
taught to evaluate theory and apply theory to client situations.
B6.8 Social welfare policy and services content must
include the history, mission, and philosophy of the social work
profession. Content must be presented about the history and current
pattern of provision of social welfare services, the role of social
policy in helping or deterring people in maintaining or achieving
optimal health and well-being, and the effect of policy on social
work practice. Students must be taught to analyze current social
policy within the context of historical and contemporary factors
that shape policy. Content must be presented about the political
and organizational processes used to influence policy, the process
of policy formulation, and the frameworks for analyzing social policies
in light of the principles of social and economic justice.
B6.9 At the baccalaureate level, professional social
work education prepares students for generalist practice with systems
of all sizes. Practice content emphasizes professional relationships
that are characterized by mutuality, collaboration, and respect
for the client. Content on practice assessment focuses on the examination
of client strengths and problems in the interactions among individuals
and between people and their environments. Social work practice
content must include knowledge, values, and skills to enhance the
well-being of people and to help ameliorate the environmental conditions
that affect people adversely. Practice content must include the
following skills: defining issues; collecting and assessing data;
planning and contracting; identifying alternative interventions;
selecting and implementing appropriate courses of action; using
appropriate research to monitor and evaluate outcomes; applying
appropriate research-based knowledge and technological advances;
and termination. Practice content also includes approaches to and
skills for practice with clients from differing social, cultural,
racial, religious, spiritual, and class backgrounds and with systems
of all sizes.
B6.10 Each program must explicate the ways in which
students are prepared for generalist practice.
B6.11 The research curriculum must provide an understanding
and appreciation of a scientific, analytic approach to building
knowledge for practice and for evaluating service delivery in all
areas of practice. Ethical standards of scientific inquiry must
be included in the research content.
The research content must include qualitative and
quantitative research methodologies; analysis of data, including
statistical procedures; systematic evaluation of practice; analysis
and evaluation of theoretical bases, research reports; and relevant
technological advances.
B6.12 Each program must identify how the research
curriculum contributes to the student's use of scientific knowledge
for practice.
B6.13 The field practicum is an integral component
of the curriculum in social work education. It engages the student
in supervised social work practice and provides opportunities to
apply classroom learning in the field setting.
B6.14 Field education at the baccalaureate level
requires a minimum of 400 hours in field practicum.
B6.15 Each educational program must establish standards
for field practicum settings that define their social work services
and practices, field instructor assignments and activities, and
student learning expectations and responsibilities. Individual programs
may organize their practice in different ways but must ensure educationally
directed, coordinated, and monitored practicum experiences for all
students. All programs must provide:
- A placement that is based upon the objectives of the educational
program and the learning needs of each student.
- Structured learning opportunities that enable students to
compare their practice experiences, integrate knowledge acquired
in the classroom, and expand knowledge beyond the scope of the
practicum setting.
- Support for field practicum instructors by:
- Sharing pertinent information about practicum students;
- Providing information about the organization and content
of the educational curriculum, emphasizing the interrelationships
among human behavior, social policy, research, and practice
content;
- Providing information about the sequencing of course content;
- Articulating clear practice and evaluation goals for the
field practicum and for each student;
- Offering orientation and training programs.
B6.16 The baccalaureate practicum must provide the
student with opportunities for:
- The development of an awareness of self in the process of
intervention;
- Supervised practice experience in the application of knowledge,
values and ethics, and practice skills to enhance the well-being
of people and to work toward the amelioration of environmental
conditions that affect people adversely;
- Use of oral and written professional communications that are
consistent with the language of the practicum setting and of
the profession;
- Use of professional supervision to enhance learning;
- Critical assessment, implementation, and evaluation of agency
policy within ethical guidelines.
B7.1 Programs of social work education must remain
vital and progressive by actively pursuing ongoing exchanges with
the practice community and other essential groups, and by developing
and assessing new knowledge and technology.
B7.1.1 Programs must establish and maintain close,
reciprocal and ongoing relationships with social work practitioners,
and use those relationships to continuously evaluate the total curriculum.
B7.1.2 Programs must establish and maintain relationships
with groups that develop, implement, and benefit from social policies
and services.
B7.1.3 Programs must establish and maintain involvement
with the professional associations and with academic disciplines
and departments.
B7.1.4 Programs must assume responsibility for systematic
and high quality scholarship that assesses social work practice
and develops new knowledge.
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