Social Work, BSW

Contact Info

Dan Freedman
BSW Program Director
dfreedm@gmu.edu
Phone: 703-993-4246

Le Anne Wisnieski
Student Services Coordinator
lwisnies@gmu.edu
Phone: 703-993-4247
Fax: 703-993-6054

Bachelor of Social Work (BSW) students are provided a range of opportunities to develop a broad knowledge and skills base consistent with the systems and strengths perspectives. They are expected to practice using core social work values and to examine and resolve ethical dilemmas. Classroom and field experiences prepare students to be competent in the use of new technologies and in culturally sensitive, generalist social work practice. 

The program is fully accredited by the Council on Social Work Education. All students are expected to abide by the Code of Ethics of the National Association of Social Workers. Students are required to successfully complete 450 hours of supervised practica in agencies approved by the Department of Social Work. Undergraduate students also have the opportunity to work in our Social Work integrative Research Lab (SWiRL), which provides them with the opportunity to engage in research projects and experience mentoring relationships with graduate students and faculty.

Program Requirements

Complete information on program requirements is available in the university catalog online. The Student Handbook for Bachelor of Social Work Majors (pdf) is also available online.

Declaring Major In Social Work

Students interested in the social work field usually declare social work as a major when applying to the university; however, declaring social work as a major does not automatically admit the student to the social work program. Students must be admitted to the major before being considered for senior practicum placement. The Admission to Major application is described on the Admissions page. If you are interested in declaring social work as your major, please contact the Social Work Department to schedule an appointment.

Professional Licensure Disclosure
This program has been identified by George Mason University as one that may lead to a career requiring professional licensure/certification. Federal regulations require Mason to disclose information as to whether this program meets/does not meet the educational requirements for licensure/certification in your state, or whether such a determination has not been made. Please consult our Licensure Disclosure Tool (https://provost.gmu.edu/licensure) for the disclosure statement specific to your desired state/program combination.

Careers

The BSW program is designed to prepare students for generalist social work practice, which means they can provide social work services in affordable housing programs, advocacy organizations, child care and after-school programs, child welfare services, community service boards, emergency services (homeless services/shelters, domestic violence services/shelters), foster care services, group homes, policy think thanks, residential living facilities, services for people with disabilities, and services for older adults (adult day care, community-based living programs, home health care, nursing facilities).

Mission

The mission of the BSW Program is to develop generalist level practitioners who can competently advocate and serve clients and client systems. The following tenets support this mission: 

  • Graduates adapt antiracist and anti-oppressive interventions grounded in the person-in-environment perspective to promote equity, inclusion, and wellness for individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities.  
  • Graduates apply multi-level, evidence-based interventions that promote human rights, and racial, environmental, social, and economic justice.  
  • Graduates build upon client strengths and resilience, professional relationships, and professional ethics for engaging, assessing, intervening, and evaluating practice.   
  • Graduates attend to the needs of practice communities and integrate historical, political, social, cultural, and global contexts to promote innovative and just practices, programs, policies, and research.       

We build upon a foundation of social work knowledge, skills, values, and affective/cognitive processes that emphasize empowerment, inclusion, and system transformation. 

Core Competencies (Council on Social Work Education, 2022)

  1. Demonstrate Ethical & Professional Behavior
  2. Advance Human Rights and Social, Racial, Economic, and Environmental Justice
  3. Engage Anti-Racism, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusions (ADEI) in Practice
  4. Engage in Practice-Informed Research & Research-Informed Practice
  5. Engage in Policy Practice
  6. Engage with Individuals, Families, Groups, Organizations, & Communities
  7. Assess Individuals, Families, Groups, Organizations, & Communities
  8. Intervene with Individuals, Families, Groups, Organizations, & Communities
  9. Evaluate Practice with Individuals, Families, Groups, Organizations, & Communities