Mission Statement of the DSW Program

The DSW Program at The University of Alabama is designed to increase specialization, independence, and leadership of social workers across systems and agencies in underserved communities. The program prepares advanced practitioners to lead efforts in promoting social and economic justice through service, advocacy, teaching, and research. 

DSW Program

The DSW program is a part-time, primarily online, three-year program designed for experienced professional social workers seeking to advance their knowledge and skills. The program offers two specializations: Advanced Clinical Practice and Organizational Leadership. Students complete 45 credit hours of coursework, 27 credit hours of which are core courses and 18 credit hours of concentration courses. Students enroll in six credit hours each semester, Fall, Spring, and Summer. Courses are mostly asynchronous with several synchronous evening sessions required per course.  Synchronous session dates are posted at the time of registration, two months before the start of each semester. The program is designed to be completed in three years. 

DSW Program Curriculum

The DSW program is a part-time, primarily online, three-year program designed for experienced professional social workers seeking to advance their knowledge and skills.  Students complete 45 credit hours of coursework, 18 of which are completed in the first year of study, 18 credits in the concentration year, and 9 capstone credits in the third year.  Students take six credit hours each semester, Fall, Spring, and Summer. Courses are completed asynchronously with several synchronous evening sessions per semester.  Synchronous session dates are posted at the time of registration, two months before the start of each semester. Students select their concentration at the start of their studies.

Learning Outcomes for the DSW Program

Upon completing the DSW Program, graduates will be able to:

  • Demonstrate advanced social work practice skills in assessment, intervention and supervision at the micro, mezzo, and/or macro levels.
  • Play an independent/leadership role in integrating advanced knowledge and theory on the social, economic, political, and philosophical conditions into health and human service delivery.
  • Integrate knowledge about research methodology with social work practice knowledge to develop and lead strategies for continued evidence-based practice, practice evaluation, and scientific knowledge-building.
  • To disseminate complex information about social work evidence, practice skills, scholarship, and interventions clearly and creatively to professional and academic audiences in written and oral formats.
  • Identify, evaluate, and implement innovative and cutting-edge strategies to address complex social and health conditions.
  • Lead teams to develop and implement social work advocacy and policy practice strategies to advanced clinical practice or organizational leadership, especially within the context of services for vulnerable and underserved communities.
  • Independently develop, implement, and evaluate innovative interventions into practice that are theoretically and evidence-based.

Graduates of the Advanced Clinical Practice concentration will be able to:

  • Demonstrate knowledge about new and advanced therapies and clinical assessment techniques with disadvantaged populations.
  • Articulate the roles that institutional and societal discrimination have impacted clinical issues affecting disadvantaged populations.

Graduates of the Organizational Leadership concentration will be able to:

  • Leverage evidence and human and organizational resources to design and implement new and innovative services for complex, disadvantaged client populations.
  • Describe and implement ethical, effective, and innovative approaches to developing and managing community and organizational resources.

The Goals of the DSW Program

The programmatic goals are:

  • To provide a rich, supportive environment that enables a diverse group of students to pursue and attain their academic, professional, clinical and/or leadership goals.
  • To prepare students to integrate theory, evidence, and critical thought to develop innovative solutions for complex challenging issues experienced by agencies and populations at the local, regional, national, and/or global levels.
  • To prepare graduates to be innovative and successful educators of future social workers.
  • To prepare practitioners to use social work research methodologies to evaluate practice and translate evidence-based interventions into practice settings.
  • To prepare advanced practitioner-scholars to incorporate theory, research, practice, and policy to contribute to existing knowledge on social work practice and advance social justice.
  • To develop stewards of the social work profession within interprofessional settings who apply and enforce ethical standards and address ethical dilemmas in health and social service systems.
  • To prepare advanced social workers to be effective and ethical managers within clinical, administrative, and/or community settings.
  • To prepare students to communicate evidence-based social work knowledge through teaching, scholarship, and professional writing.