Social Work
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General Criteria
Successful performance in graduate social work education requires emotional maturity and stability, interest in working with people and readiness to assume professional responsibilities. The applicant’s knowledge of professional social work and/or experience in social work settings is an important consideration for admission. The general criteria for MSW admission are as follows:
Applicants must complete an application online.
Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university. Undergraduate preparation should demonstrate an intellectual capacity for graduate study.
Applicants must provide official transcripts from all previously attended colleges.
Applicants must submit a Statement of Purpose that articulates knowledge of professional social work, discusses the applicant’s experience in a social work setting, and answers the questions on the application.
Applicants must provide two professional letters of reference. Applicants applying to the OYR and Advanced Standing Programs are required to supply additional letters of reference.
Applicants must pay a non-refundable $75 application fee. If you are currently a non-matriculated student and plan to apply to the program the following semester, your application fee may be waived.
GRE test scores are not required for admission into our program.
Two Letters of Recommendation (One must be from your Social Service employer, internship, or volunteership; the second can be same or Academic)
Transcripts from your Undergraduate and Graduate Colleges
Statement of Purpose (Recommended 3-4 pages)
All MSW students at the Silberman School of Social Work concentrate (major) in one of three Practice Methods. A student’s chosen Practice Method serves as the foundation of their academic and professional experience throughout their time in the program. MSW Applicants select one Method when applying to the program. The three Practice Methods offered are: | |||
Clinical Practice with Individuals, Families and Small Groups (CPIFG)This Method introduces students to agency-based clinical practice in the urban environment. Clinical assessment and therapeutic interventions are taught from a biopsychosocial perspective. Clinical Practice prepares students through evidence-based theory and practice to provide psychosocial care to individuals, couples, families, and small groups. Clinical social workers help these clients to enact psychological and interpersonal change, increase their access to social and economic resources, and maintain and enhance their capacities and strengths. For a list of core CPIFG courses, please see MSW Program Curriculum. Community Organizing, Planning and Development (COP&D)This Method develops students’ competence for community-based social work practice. It stresses the skills, techniques, and strategies needed to mobilize both people and resources to solve basic social problems at either the neighborhood or citywide level. Focus is placed on social planning and social reform, as aspects of social work practice toward alleviating individual and family problems. Education, training, and field practicums are developed in collective action, advocacy, program evaluation, proposal writing, community outreach, legislative advocacy, and other vital, diverse organizing roles. For a list of core COP&D courses, please see MSW Program Curriculum. Organizational Management and Leadership (OML)Students in this Method are prepared to assume varied management positions in social agencies (including the traditional supervisory, middle management, and executive positions) as well as jobs as program planners and analysts, staff trainers, program directors, or budget analysts. They will develop conscious and strategic use of self in managing the complex tasks of program managers. Students seeking to concentrate in OML should have some prior management experience either in social work or at a human services agency. For a list of core OML courses, please see MSW Program Curriculum. |
The Silberman School of Social Work offers several distinct pathways to the Master of Social Work degree. These pathways help to make a rigorous graduate education possible for the greatest range of social work students. MSW applicants select a degree pathway when applying to the program. MSW applicants may apply for study in only one degree pathway. Each pathway requires unique pre-requisites and application materials. The pathways offered as of 2019-2020, with their respective admission requirements, are: | |||
Two-Year Full-Time ProgramThe Two-Year Full-Time Program is designed for students who can devote themselves to full-time academic and field-based study. Students are expected to attend classes two days a week with their pathway cohort, and to attend their field placement three days a week during standard business hours. Under this pathway, students complete the 60 academic credits required for graduation in two years. Eligibility Requirements
Application Materials
Accelerated Full-Time ProgramThe Accelerated Full-Time Program is designed for students ready to participate in an intensive, year-round learning experience. Students in this pathway complete their degrees over five consecutive semesters – including two summers – spanning 18 months. Accelerated Full-Time students matriculate in January, are assigned field placements, and complete their first-year requirements by the end of the first summer. They then start the third semester in the fall, and ultimately finish the program the following August. Because of its uninterrupted trajectory and intensive academic nature, the Accelerated Full-Time Program is among the most very rigorous programs offered at the Silberman School of Social Work. Please Note: The only Practice Method available to students in the Accelerated Full-Time Program is Clinical Practice with Individuals, Families, and Small Groups (CPIFG). Eligibility Requirements
Application Materials
One-Year Residency (OYR) ProgramThe Silberman School of Social Work at Hunter College offers the nation’s oldest work-study MSW program, called the One-Year Residency (OYR) Program, designed for social service professionals. Launched in the early 1970s to serve New York’s dedicated social service workers who could not pursue graduate education while working, the OYR Program ensures that students can obtain the MSW while continuing to work. It does this by integrating the student’s professional environment with their MSW degree path. Students typically attend courses part-time at Silberman over one school year and two summers (Time Frame I). Then, they spend one intensive “residency” year within the organizations where they already work, completing school-approved field practicum internships that are distinct from their preexisting roles (Time Frame II). Finally, they complete their coursework at Silberman (Time Frame III). The OYR Program trajectory typically takes about 28 months in total. Applicants are eligible to apply to the OYR Program if they have earned a bachelor’s degree; completed at least two years of successful full-time employment as a direct care worker or supervisor of direct care workers in a social service agency at the time of application; and obtain their employer’s formal agreement to provide a field placement, approved by the School of Social Work, during their second year in the program. Eligibility Requirements
Note: OYR applicants are required to select the Practice Method that relates to their existing social service role and experience. Application Materials
Accelerated One-Year Residency (OYR) ProgramThis accelerated version of Silberman’s One-Year Residency (OYR) Program (see previous) is an intensive program for OYR students prepared to participate in a highly rigorous curriculum. Mirroring the standard OYR Program, applicants are eligible to apply if they have completed at least two years of successful full-time employment as a direct care worker or supervisor of direct care workers in a social service agency at the time of application, and obtained their current social service employer’s approval to provide the required field placement internship, approved by Silberman, during the student’s third and fourth semesters in the program. Students typically complete the 60-credit Accelerated OYR Program in six semesters or about 24 months. Please Note: The only Practice Method available to students in the Accelerated OYR Program is Clinical Practice with Individuals, Families, and Small Groups (CPIFG). Eligibility Requirements
Note: OYR applicants are required to select the Practice Method that relates to their existing social service role and experience. Application Materials
Advanced Standing ProgramStudents who have earned a Bachelor of Social Work (BSW) degree from a CSWE-accredited social work program are able to pursue the full-time MSW with Advanced Standing. Advanced Standing applicants must have received the BSW degree within five years prior to application. Advanced Standing applicants must also have earned an overall GPA of 3.0 and a GPA of 3.2 in the Social Work major. Students accepted into the program receive credit for the first MSW year, and can typically complete the remaining 36 credits in three semesters. Advanced Standing students begin their studies in the fall; complete one academic year of full-time study, including a field placement that takes place three days per week during standard business hours; and continue their studies over the summer to finish the program. Alternatively (and depending on the student’s chosen Practice Method), Advanced Standing students may choose to extend their program of study so they finish in the following fall. The Organizational Management and Leadership (OML) Practice Method is not available to Advanced Standing students. Eligibility Requirements
Application Materials
NoteFor further information about admission to the Silberman School of Social Work, please e-mail admissions at grad.socworkadvisor@hunter.cuny.edu or swapp@hunter.cuny.edu, or visit the School’s website at sssw.hunter.cuny.edu. |
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3 Elective Courses