UWM Undergraduate Catalog 2008-09Helen Bader School of Social Welfare |
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Student Services
Enderis Hall, Room 1110
(414) 229-4852
http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/SSW/
Bachelor of Science Criminal Justice, Social Work
Master of Science Criminal Justice
Master of Social Work
The Helen Bader School of Social Welfare offers programs to educate students about social policies and programs, and to train them for beginning level practice in a variety of professional roles in social work and criminal justice. Its location in metropolitan Milwaukee gives students numerous opportunities to gain practical experience in social, health, educational, or criminal justice agencies.
Undergraduate majors in both social work and criminal justice lead to the Bachelor of Science degree, and are designed to prepare students for available entry level positions in their respective fields. These programs also provide excellent preparation for graduate work.
The School also offers graduate programs at the masters degree level in both criminal justice and social work (see the UWM Graduate School Bulletin).
Requirements for Employment, Licensing or Professional Organizations. Effective October 1, 1998, changes in Chapters 48 (Childrens Code) and 50 (Uniform Licensure) of the Wisconsin State Statutes make it a requirement for selected organizations to perform rigorous background checks of persons who provide care for vulnerable adults and children or who have access to people who receive such care.
The results of these background checks are intended to help employers and government officials in making employment and licensing decisions. The law affects anyone who is employed as a caregiver or who has access to clients within caregiving organizations, including students. The organizations required to perform these background checks are those which are regulated by the State Department of Health and Family Services (DHFS).
The law means that if you are going to train (including a field or clinical placement) or work in an agency providing care to vulnerable adults or children, and that agency is regulated by DHFS, a background check will be required of you. A background check may be required even if you do not have direct caregiving responsibilities to clients. Depending on the circumstances, a student may be disqualified from field placement in certain agencies as a result of this law. Students are responsible for obtaining the information necessary for them to become knowledgeable about these requirements and plan their studies accordingly.
Freshmen entering UWM who indicate an interest in criminal justice or social work are admitted directly into the Helen Bader School of Social Welfare, and are designated criminal justice or social work intended majors.
Admission to the School will not guarantee enrollment in the social work or criminal justice major; separate applications will be required for these programs in the junior year.
Transfer students who transfer from outside UWM to criminal justice or social work become criminal justice or social work intended majors upon admission regardless of the number of credits they transfer. They can apply for admission to the major when they have at least junior standing and have completed one full-time semester or the equivalent at UWM. Those who transfer from two-year UW College campuses, Milwaukee Area Technical College, and other two-year institutions (junior colleges) are generally allowed to transfer up to 72 credits toward a degree in the Helen Bader School of Social Welfare.
Second bachelors degree students applying to the University who already hold one bachelors degree and who wish to pursue a second degree in either criminal justice or social work are admitted directly to the major. They must complete at least 30 credits at UWM beyond the credits which counted toward the first degree, and must satisfy the same degree and curriculum requirements as students working towards a first degree in the same major.
Special students in the Helen Bader School of Social Welfare and University Special Students are permitted to register in any undergraduate course offered by the School provided they meet the stated prerequisites or are admitted to the course by the instructor.
To receive the bachelors degree with a criminal justice or social work major, the student must complete at least 30 degree credits at UWM. In both majors, an overall GPA (including non-UWM college work) of 2.0 and a total of 120 credits are needed for graduation. At least 15 credits in the criminal justice or 21 credits in the social work portion of the major must be earned at UWM. Social work students must complete at least one semester of field placement at UWM. Students must earn their last 30 credits at UWM.
All social work and criminal justice majors who began their education in Fall 1999 or later must meet the requirements below. Others should contact an advisor in the School to determine their degree requirements.
GENERAL CURRICULUM REQUIREMENTS: SOCIAL WORK AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE
For courses which satisfy the distribution requirements of humanities, natural science, and social science courses see the GER listing in the current Timetable. The UWM General Education Requirements apply to all students who were not enrolled in an accredited institution prior to 1986.
Proficiency Requirements in English and Mathematics. Refer to General Education Requirements. Contact a school advisor for specific information.
Liberal Arts Foundation.The student must fulfill the following course distribution requirements:
Arts. 3 credits of General Education-approved arts course in the history, philosophy, theory or practice of the creative and interpretive arts.
Foreign Language. Completion of two years of high school-level instruction in a single foreign language, or satisfactory completion of at least two semesters of a single foreign language, or approved demonstration of foreign language ability.
Humanities. 12 credits of General Education-approved humanities courses, including Commun 103, Public Speaking.
Natural Science. 6 credits of General Education-approved natural science courses to include a lab or field course.
United States History and Institutions, 6 credits. Either one continuous-year course in U.S. history chosen from option I below or one semester in advanced U.S. history courses (numbered over 400) plus one of the courses taken from option II.
OPTION I
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Hist 151 |
American History: 1607 to 1865 |
3 |
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and |
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Hist 152 |
American History: 1865 to the Present |
3 |
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or |
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Hist 421 |
American Thought and Culture: To 1860 |
3 |
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and |
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Hist 422 |
American Thought and Culture: Since 1860 |
3 |
OPTION II
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Econ 100 |
Introduction to Economics |
3 |
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Econ 103 |
Principles of Economics |
3 |
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Pol Sci 104 |
American Politics: The National Scene |
3 |
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Pol Sci 105 |
State Politics |
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Pol Sci 385 |
American Political Thought |
3 |
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Pol Sci 405 |
State Government |
3 |
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Pol Sci 411 |
Constitutional Law: The Supreme Court and Political Process |
3 |
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Pol Sci 412 |
Constitutional Law: Individual Rights and Liberties |
3 |
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Pol Sci 471 |
Special Problems in Civil Liberties |
3 |
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Sociol 200 |
Contemporary American Society |
3 |
REQUIREMENTS IN THE MAJOR
A minimum total of 57-69 credits is required. See the section on the social work and criminal justice majors.
ELECTIVES
Students may take up to 30 elective credits in courses outside the Helen Bader School of Social Welfare and the College of Letters and Science. Credits earned in H687 (Senior Honors Project) or H688/689 (Senior Honors Thesis) will not count towards either major.
For information on actions on unsatisfactory grades and honors for scholarship, see Academic Information.
Semester Course Load. Registration for more than 18 credits in a given semester requires the permission of the Assistant Dean. For students in the Schools majors, this permission will be given upon advice of the appropriate program chair.
Change in Requirements. If curriculum requirements are changed after the student has been formally accepted in the major, the student is free to remain with the former requirements or to follow the new ones.
Administration
Stan Stojkovic
Dean
Diane Miller
Assistant Dean
Deborah Padgett
Chair, Social Work Department
Christine Lowery
Coordinator, Undergraduate Social Work Program
Steven G. Brandl
Chair, Criminal Justice Department
Social Work
Audrey Begun, Prof., Ph.D.
University of Michigan
Lisa Berger, Asst. Prof., Ph.D.
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Michael Brondino, Asst. Prof., Ph.D.
University of South Carolina
Michael Fendrich, Prof, Ph.D.
University of Texas- Austin
Roberta Hanus, Clinical Assoc. Prof., M.S.W.
University of California, Berkeley
Goldie Kadushin, Assoc. Prof., Ph.D.
University of Illinois-Chicago
Sharon Keigher, Prof., Ph.D.
University of Chicago
Gwat Lie, Assoc. Prof., Ph.D.
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Susan Loeher, Assoc. Prof., M.S.W.
University of Chicago
Christine Lowery, Assoc. Prof., Ph.D.
University of Washington
Margaret Maillet, Senior Lecturer, Ph.D.
Louisiana State University
Katie Mangan, Clinical Assoc. Prof., M.S.W.
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Joshua Mersky, Asst Prof, Ph.D.
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Steve McMurtry, Prof., Ph.D.
University of Wisconsin-Madison
R. L. McNeely, Prof., Ph.D.
Brandeis University
Deborah L. Padgett, Assoc. Prof., Ph.D.
Washington University, St. Louis
David Pate, Asst. Prof., Ph.D.
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Susan Rose, Assoc. Prof., Ph.D.
University of Illinois-Chicago
Marie Savundravayagam, Asst Prof, Ph.D.
University of Kansas
Jose Torres, Assoc. Prof., Ph.D.
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Wendy Volz Daniels, Clinical Asst. Prof., M.S.W.
Loyola University
Criminal Justice
Steven G. Brandl, Assoc. Prof., Ph.D.
Michigan State University
Tina Freiburger, Asst. Prof., Ph.D.
Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Kimberly Hassell, Asst. Prof., Ph.D.
University of Nebraska-Omaha
Thomas LeBel, Asst. Prof., Ph.D.
SUNY-Albany
Rick Lovell, Assoc. Prof., Ph.D.
Michigan State University
Carl E. Pope, Prof., Ph.D.
SUNY-Albany
Stan Stojkovic, Prof., Ph.D.
Michigan State University