Course
code: 0004
Clayton campus
HECS fees applicable
Workshop attendance compulsory
The
course provides a base for, and introduction to, the practice of social work at
interpersonal, group and broader societal levels. In the course emphasis is
placed on students acquiring the knowledge and skill to successfully practice
in a wide variety of social work settings.
It is envisaged that by offering the course in the distance education mode, it
will provide many people who previously had limited access to studying social
work an opportunity to become a qualified social worker.
The course is approved by the Australian Association of Social Workers (AASW) Ltd and graduates are eligible for membership. Student membership is also available.
The
Bachelor of Social Work is available to:
(a) undergraduates who have successfully completed two years of degree
study;
(b) graduates from Monash University or other equivalent institutions;
(c) diplomates who have completed the Associate Diploma of Arts (Welfare
Studies) at Monash University College Gippsland, Caulfield, or equivalent
institution.
Please note that no credits can be given for subjects taken within a course
which is the entry requirement for the Bachelor of Social Work.
Should have completed the equivalent of two years of a degree. Studies must have included at least one year of the study of the individual in society and one year of the study of society.
Graduates
may be admitted if they have qualified for a degree at Monash or another
university or equivalent institution, and the Faculty of Arts approves the work
completed for the degree as being a suitable preparation for candidature. This
means that their course of studies must have included at least one year of the
study of the individual in society and one year of the study of society.
Selection takes account not only of academic achievements but of personal
factors and a referee's report. Evidence of social work or welfare experience
(paid or voluntary) and other preparation for social work studies will also be
taken into consideration.
Applicants must be at least nineteen years of age by the date of commencement
of the course. No upper age limit as such is fixed.
Integrated
with classwork over the four years of the course are student fieldwork
placements. The aim of the fieldwork placements is to provide students with the
opportunity to integrate the knowledge and skills required in the academic
component of the course with the requirements of social work practice.
Students do their placements in human service agencies, and receive support and
supervision from qualified social workers. Fieldwork liaison staff from the
Department of Social Work remain in contact with students during placements.
The AASW stipulates that students should complete a minimum of twenty-eight
weeks of fieldwork during their social work training. The fieldwork is split
into two placements, the first normally to be undertaken in year two and the
second in year four of the part-time course.
This means that students will have to work full-time in an agency for fourteen
weeks in each of these two semesters (part-time field placement of three days
per week over a longer period may be negotiated with the department). Intending
students are advised to give prior consideration as to how they will
accommodate fieldwork requirements with any personal commitments.
Two compulsory workshops are held per year over the four-year period, usually in February and June. Each workshop is of three days duration and held during the week at the Clayton campus in Melbourne. The workshops enable students and staff to get to know each other, allow students to clarify theoretical and practice issues about the course and, most importantly, enable students to acquire social work skills and knowledge. Accordingly, the workshops are designed to ensure that students have face-to-face input from lecturers in all the subjects in which they are enrolled. (Students must meet their own travel and accommodation costs.)
The
Bachelor of Social Work is of four years part-time duration by the distance
education mode.
All students enter Year One of the course. Students must pass both academic
work and fieldwork successfully before being awarded the degree of Bachelor of
Social Work.
The sequence of the degree for distance education study is set out below.
First semester |
Second semester | |
Year 1 |
||
Year 2 |
SWK3130 Social work perspectives on human development I;SWK3190 Social policy and administration I; SWK3180 Fieldwork II -- placement |
SWK3210 Contexts of social work practice I; SWK3160 Social work research II; SWK3180 Fieldwork II -- placement continued |
Year 3 |
SWK4610 Community health I; SWK4550 Fieldwork III -- skills; SWK4570 Social policy and administration III |
SWK4530 Social and behavioural studies I; SWK4830 Contexts of social work practice II |
Year 4 |
SWK4510 Social work III; SWK4560 Fieldwork IV -- placement |
SWK4520 Social work IV; SWK4560 Fieldwork IV -- placement continued |
As the Bachelor of Social Work is a professional qualification designed to build on prior tertiary education, credits will not be granted for subjects which are prerequisites of the course. However, applicants who have a second or higher degree, or who have completed part of a Bachelor of Social Work course at another institution may apply for credit where the subject is comparable to the subject in the Bachelor of Social Work. Full documentation, including course outlines and content, are required to be submitted if an applicant requests credits.
Assessment consists primarily of assignment work.
For more detailed information, contact the distance education secretary, Department of Social Work and Human Services, telephone (03) 9905 4282.
Applications
must include 'Application for admission 1999', social work application form,
essays (as outlined in the social work application form), and a confidential
referee's report. Copies of the social work application form and referee's
report form can be obtained by telephoning the Distance Education Office on
(03) 9905 4282 or fax (03) 9905 4281.
Completed applications are to be forwarded to Distance Education Office,
Department of Social Work and Human Services, Monash University, Wellington
Road, Clayton, 3168, by 23 October 1998, although applications will be
received up until the end of November/early December if course places are still
available.