MURFREESBORO — MTSU’s
partnerships with two other universities has paid off in a way that will
provide the labor market with greater numbers of highly qualified social
workers.
The Council on Social Work Education issued initial
accreditation for the Mid-TN Collaborative Master of Social Work Program
administered by MTSU, Tennessee State University and Austin Peay State
University on June 13.
The accreditation is retroactive to 2009 to cover those
students who had already begun their degree track.
Dr. Rebecca Smith, chair of the MTSU department of Social
Work, says the three-institution collaboration for a master’s degree in social work
is the first of its kind in the nation.
“The sharing of resources will help to provide education to
a wider range and network of students,” Smith said.
It comes at a time when MTSU has the largest undergraduate
bachelor’s degree program for social work in the state, and people are
clamoring to get in.
“The master’s degree program is designed for the working
professional,” said Smith. “All classes are either at night or online.”
“The demand for advanced generalist social workers within
the U.S. labor force is greater than ever with … recent immigration, changes in
the economic system and implementation of the Patient and Affordable Health
Care Act,” said Vicki Williams, director of the Social Work Program at
Tennessee State University.
Both the bachelor’s and master’s degrees require internships
in which the student is supervised by a social worker and monitored by a social
work faculty member.
“This field work experience occurs in an agency setting,
allowing students to combine classroom learning with real-world experience
under the supervision of agency personnel and mentored by faculty,” Smith said.
MTSU alumna Yvette White, who obtained her master’s degree
in May 2013, is the beneficiary of three of those internships.
Born and reared in Philadelphia, White said she saw so many
areas of need, including substance abuse, crime and poverty.
As the mother of one son with Down syndrome and another with
mental health issues, White was inspired by a social worker to enter the
profession.
“When she came to my home, she focused on me, and it was
very impactful,” White said.
“Social work is really advocating for people, connecting
individuals with different services and just being there with empathy and
compassion.”
White worked for an agency that advocated for people with
developmental disabilities in Philadelphia for seven years prior to entering
college.
At MTSU, she interned with 100 Black Men of Nashville, the
Tennessee Rehabilitation Center in Smyrna and a Nashville facility that helps
prostitutes turn their lives around.
White says she will take a licensure exam in October, and
then she would like to find a job working at a drug and alcohol abuse
rehabilitation clinic.
Her prospects are bright. According to the Tennessee
Department of Labor, mental health and substance abuse social workers are one
of the two hottest careers in the state requiring a master’s degree.
For more information, contact the MTSU Department of Social
Work at 615-898-2868 or Dr. Ann Callahan, associate professor and master’s
degree program coordinator, at 615-898-2477 or ann.callahan@mtsu.edu.
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