Javascript is currently not supported, or is disabled by this browser. Please enable Javascript for full functionality.

Skip to Main Content
University of Pittsburgh    
2025-2026 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
 
  Jan 04, 2026
 
2025-2026 Undergraduate Catalog

Social Work, BASW


Return to School of Social Work Return to: School of Social Work

School of Social Work

The School of Social Work was founded in September 1938 as a successor to the Division of Social Work in the Department of Sociology. The Bachelor of Arts in Social Work (BASW) program was accredited in 1973 and has been continuously reaffirmed since that time. The BASW Program is offered as an upper-division (i.e., junior and senior years only) academic major, underscoring the program’s commitment to a strong liberal arts base.  

As communicated through its mission, the School of Social Work: 

  • Prepares courageous leaders to transform social work practice, policy, research, and education in a community-engaged and inclusive environment  
  • Develops and advances innovative approaches to understand, prevent, and ameliorate complex social problems.. 
  • Builds collaborative partnerships to promote social justice  

In furtherance of its mission, the goals of the School of Social Work are to:  

  • Educate professional social workers with the knowledge, skills, and values needed to engage in culturally competent practice with diverse populations and communities, to critically analyze personal, familial and environmental factors affecting practice settings and practice techniques, and to advocate for those who confront barriers to maximizing the achievement of their fullest potential.  
  • Engage in scholarly activities that contribute to professional knowledge about complex social problems and innovative approaches to ameliorate those problems.  
  • Provide service to local, national, and international communities through the development of and participation in collaborations with social agencies, community-based organizations, government, and foundations. 

The BASW Program, built on a strong liberal arts base, prepares its students to be competent entry-level generalist social work practitioners and for graduate education. Recognizing the profession’s values of service, social justice, the dignity and worth of the person, the importance of human relationships, integrity, competence, human rights, and scientific inquiry, the program provides students with the knowledge and skills needed to advance human and community well-being. Utilizing a person-in-environment framework, the program prepares students to enhance the quality of life for all people, locally and globally; to practice with diverse populations; to analyze critically the social, economic, and environmental factors affecting individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities; and to advocate for those who confront structural barriers; thus, program graduates are prepared for service and leadership.  

As such, the goals of the BASW Program are to prepare students to:  

  • Practice with cultural humility in accordance with the principles, values, and ethics that guide the social work profession.  
  • Use their liberal arts foundation and their understanding of bio-psycho-social-spiritual-cultural development to engage in evidence-informed generalist social work practice with individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities within a multicultural society.  
  • Advocate for human rights and social, economic, and environmental justice.  
  • Continue formal education either in graduate social work education or in another graduate discipline. 

In addition, since 2001, the BASW Program has offered the Child Welfare Education for Baccalaureates (CWEB) program as an optional educational opportunity for undergraduate social work majors interested in preparing for employment in one of Pennsylvania’s 67 public child welfare agencies.

Contact Information

University of Pittsburgh

School of Social Work Office of Admissions

Room 2101 Cathedral of Learning Pittsburgh, PA 15260

412-624-6302

Fax: 412-624-6323

HMC60@pitt.edu

www.socialwork.pitt.edu

Special Opportunities

The Child Welfare Education for Baccalaureates (CWEB) Program provides an educational opportunity for students interested in public child welfare services. Qualified students who are enrolled as social work majors may receive substantial financial support in return for a contractual obligation to accept employment in a Pennsylvania public child welfare agency following completion of their social work degree. Students interested in the program should contact Dr. Toya Jones, Director of BASW Program at toyaj@pitt.edu or 412-648-9306.

The Behavioral Health Case Management Program is a certificate available to Social Work and Psychology majors, that leads to possible employment opportunities in a fast paced behavioral health service sector. To read more about the career opportunities available to graduates who hold this certificate please visit the Allegheny County Department of Human Services (DHS) web page.

More information about the program is available on the web and by contacting the Director of the Bachelor of Arts in Social Work Program, Dr. Toya Jones, MSW at toyaj@pitt.edu or 412-648-9306.

Admission Requirements

For admission to the Bachelor of Arts in Social Work program (BASW), a student must meet the following requirements:

  • Completion of approximately 60 transferable credits from an accredited undergraduate institution and/or completion of an accredited associate degree program.
  • A minimum of 2.50 GPA on a 4.00 scale.

Credits awarded from the College Level Examination Program [CLEP] by the College of General Studies are counted toward the 60 credits. Academic and field education credits are not granted in the BASW program for life, volunteer, or employment experience.

Application Procedures

Students may apply for the fall term or spring term. Students currently enrolled within the University of Pittsburgh system should submit applications and all credentials to the School of Social Work Office of Admissions. Students applying from outside the University of Pittsburgh should send all application materials and credentials directly to the University Office of Admissions and Financial Aid (see Pittsburgh campus Freshman Admissions for address). The Undergraduate program in the School of Social Work has a ROLLING ADMISSIONS POLICY.

  TERM

  FALL

  SPRING

  INTERNAL TRANSFER

  AUGUST 15

  DECEMBER 1

  EXTERNAL TRANSFER

  JULY 30

  DECEMBER 1

  • The application fee of $55 (only if applying from another institution; current University of Pittsburgh students do not have to pay this fee).
  • A complete transcript from the registrar of each college attended. If course work is still in progress at the time the application is filed, the student should request a supplemental transcript at the end of each term. Although a decision for acceptance may be made while academic work is still in progress, an up-to-date transcript must be received before the applicant can register for course work. Persons seeking a transfer to the University of Pittsburgh from another college or university must also submit a high school transcript or its equivalent.
  • A four-part typewritten statement (of no more than eight pages) discussing the following concerns in depth:
    • the influence in the student’s life experience that made him/her select social work as a profession,
    • what the student believes social work education can contribute to his/her professional competence, and
    • what the student believes to be one of the most important contemporary social issues and why.
    • Anti-racism and anti-oppression are core values in the Pitt School of Social Work. As a Pitt BASW student and future social worker, how do you see yourself aligning with anti-racist and anti-oppressive social work practice?
  • The application supplement sheet, which requests information on the student’s employment background, a list of the names and addresses of the people who will be completing reference forms on the applicant’s behalf, and academic credit requirement questions.
  • Two letters of reference. Required references include college advisors, an instructor at the college level, and the current (or last) employer/volunteer supervisor. Applicants should send the blank reference forms received with the application materials to each of the reference persons. The School of Social Work admissions office will periodically notify the applicant of the status of the application materials, and the applicant will be expected to follow through with each reference to ensure receipt of the letter. Reference persons should mail the completed form directly to the School of Social Work Office of Admissions.

 

Other Supporting Application Materials

The School of Social Work does not require the submission of scores from an examination for admission consideration. However, applicants wishing to submit such exam scores or other materials (publications, major papers, etc.) in support of their application may do so. In no instance will an applicant not submitting these be penalized in determining acceptance for the program.

Admission Interviews

Interviews may be initiated by the admissions personnel of the School of Social Work. Applicants who feel they would like to discuss special circumstances surrounding their applications are encouraged to seek admission interviews. The interview, if requested, should be scheduled after all application materials have been received. Usually, decisions on applications for admission are made without an interview.

Grading Standards Policy for the BASW Program

This policy covers the following areas in regard to grading:

Good Academic Standing

In order to remain in good academic standing and to graduate from the BASW program, all students must

  • Obtain a grade of C or better in all courses required for the major (including Practicum 1 and 2),
  • Maintain a minimum 2.50 on a 4.00 scale in their social work major
  • Conform to the standards of professional conduct as specified in the NASW Code of Ethics (see below), and
  • Maintain a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.50 on a 4.00 scale.

Honors

The program honors those students whose academic performance (cumulative GPA) places them in the upper two percent of their graduating class. These students are considered for honors recognition at the annual Honors Convocation conducted by the University in the spring of each year. BASW majors are also eligible for membership in Phi Alpha, the National Social Work Honor Society, if they have completed their social work major with a social work GPA of 3.85 or higher.

Bachelor of Philosophy Degree

In the spirit of intellectual curiosity envisioned by the Board of Trustees and the David C. Frederick Honors College when the Bachelor of Philosophy degree (BPhil) was created, the BPhil creates the opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in research and scholarly work toward a more rigorous baccalaureate degree traditionally reserved for the graduate level. In combination with the David C. Frederick Honors College requirements it, “preserves an element of intellectual scope, ever the distinctive feature of American undergraduate education (A. Stewart).” This degree is offered jointly between the David C. Frederick Honors College and the School of Social Work.

BASW majors who meet the David C. Frederick Honors College (FHC) eligibility requirements and who are interested in pursuing a Bachelor of Philosophy degree in social work should make an appointment with the BASW Program Director to review criteria and process for the degree.

The BASW student will be referred to the David C. Frederick Honors College Web site to review the Bachelor of Philosophy degree requirements.

The requirements to participate in the UHC are as follows:

  • Maintain a 3.50 GPA or higher in BASW major in the School of Social Work and a 3.50 GPA or higher overall at the University of Pittsburgh.
  • Transfer students must have an incoming GPA of 3.50 or higher and maintain a 3.50 GPA in BASW major course work offered through the School of Social Work as well as a 3.50 GPA or higher overall at the University of Pittsburgh.
  • In unusual circumstances, a student who shows exceptional promise but does not meet the above requirements may be accepted to BPhil candidacy as recommended by the BASW Program Director to the School of Social Work Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and determined by the UHC advising staff.

Based upon a BASW student’s area of interest, a thesis advisor will be assigned by the Associate Dean for Academic Affairs. The BASW Program Director and the student’s advisor will meet with the student to draft a program of study/curriculum plan. Assignment of an advisor is contingent upon faculty availability and willingness to serve.

General degree requirements are:

  • Fulfill the BASW degree requirements with a minimum 3.50 GPA.
  • Complete the social work general education requirements with a minimum 3.50 GPA. This includes 24 credits in the social and behavioral sciences; minimum of 3 credits in Africana studies; minimum of 3 credits in English composition; minimum 3 credits in human biology and a minimum of 3 credits in statistics.
  • Enroll in one course in each of the following areas, selecting one as an area of specialization, with a minimum of 12 credits and grades corresponding to a 3.50 GPA or higher: Africana studies; anthropology; economics; global studies; political science; psychology; sociology; urban studies; women’s studies.
  • In all of the above coursework, a prospective BPhil student is encouraged to enroll in an UHC section of the course, if available. Overall GPA requirements remain the same for these courses.

The prospective BPhil student will make an appointment with the UHC advising staff regarding Honors College qualifications for degree candidacy.

The prospective BPhil student will complete the BASW degree requirements listed above as well as complete “Special Degree Requirements”. These include:

  1. Completion of independent research culminating in the production of an original undergraduate thesis.
  • The thesis will be completed under the tutelage of the faculty advisor who will guide the student in designing and implementing the research project as well as in writing the thesis.
  • At least two terms prior to the B.Phil. in Social Work student’s expected date of graduation a synopsis of the proposed research (approved by the School of Social Work thesis advisor) will be submitted to the David C. Frederick Honors College.
  • By the last term in residence, the student will: Submit a revised and completed thesis to their Faculty Advisor (for distribution to the Examining Committee) at least five weeks prior to the end of the term.

Defend their thesis to a faculty Examination Committee selected by the faculty advisor.

  1. Include a faculty member from outside the University of Pittsburgh as an invited member of the Examination Committee.
  2. Consist of a public presentation and discussion of the thesis project followed by a private oral examination conducted by the Examining Committee.

Recommendation from the Faculty Examination Committee for the awarding of the B.Phil. in Social Work degree will be made to the Dean of the Honors College, who, after certifying that all aspects of the BASW degree requirements as well as the B.Phil. Special Degree Requirements have been fulfilled, will make a recommendation to the UHC. The B.Phil. in Social Work degree will be conferred jointly by the School of Social Work and the UHC through the granting of a single Bachelor of Philosophy in Social Work diploma.

If all of the degree requirements are met, a single degree, the Bachelor of Philosophy degree with a major in social work, will be conferred jointly by the School of Social Work and the David C. Frederick Honors College.

For additional details on this degree program, please contact the School of Social Work or the Honors College.

National Association of Social Workers (NASW) Code of Ethics

Professional ethics are at the core of social work. The profession has an obligation to articulate its basic values, ethical principles, and ethical standards. The NASW Code of Ethics sets forth these values, principles, and standards to guide social workers’ conduct. The code is relevant to all social workers and social work students, regardless of their professional functions, the settings in which they work, or the populations they serve. The NASW Code of Ethics serves six purposes:

  • The code identifies core values on which social work’s mission is based.
  • The code summarizes broad ethical principles that reflect the profession’s core values and establishes a set of specific ethical standards that should be used to guide social work practice.
  • The code is designed to help social workers identify relevant considerations when conflicting professional obligations or ethical uncertainties arise.
  • The code provides ethical standards to which the general public can hold the social work profession accountable.
  • The code socializes practitioners new to the field to social work’s mission, values, ethical principles, and ethical standards.
  • The code articulates standards that the social work profession itself can use to assess whether social workers have engaged in unethical conduct. NASW has formal procedures to adjudicate ethics complaints filed against its members. In subscribing to this code, social workers are required to cooperate in its implementation, participate in NASW adjudication proceedings, and abide by any NASW disciplinary rulings or sanctions based on it.

The code offers a set of values, principles, and standards to guide decision making and conduct when ethical issues arise. It does not provide a set of rules that prescribe how social workers should act in all situations. Specific applications of the code must take into account the context in which it is being considered and the possibility of conflicts among the code’s values, principles, and standards. Ethical responsibilities flow from all human relationships, from the personal and familial to the social and professional. Social work students are required to comply with the NASW Code of Ethics. Copies can be obtained from the NASW Web page at www.socialworkers.org.

Statute of Limitations

There is a seven-year limitation on the earning of the BASW degree with the seven-year period beginning from the date of entry into the program. Under the following extenuating circumstances, the advisor may recommend an extension of time to the program director and the associate dean:

  • Extended illness of the student,
  • Involuntary mobilization into a U.S. military unit,
  • Death of a close family member,
  • Extended personal emergency, or
  • Academic probation in the last term of the student’s program.

Undergraduate Advising

When admitted, new BASW majors are assigned an advisor by the BASW program director (students completing the social work minor maintain the academic advisor in their current college or school). Incoming BASW majors meet their assigned faculty advisor at the school’s orientation, which is held prior to the start of fall semester. Incoming students are then encouraged to make an appointment with their faculty advisor during the first three to four weeks of the term. Each advisor will work with his or her advisee to clarify educational options, answer questions about the BASW Program, and discuss career opportunities. When students enroll for Practicum Seminar I and the concurrent Practicum Seminar and Lab I, the seminar and lab instructor in the section the student chooses becomes his or her faculty advisor for the remainder of their enrollment in the program. Faculty advisors should be the first point of contact for any or all of the following:

  • Registration including add/drop, leaves of absence, and withdrawals; Clarification of all academic policies and procedures (i.e., grading policies, graduation requirements, directed study);
  • Discussions regarding academic expectations and performance;
  • Information about other departments and/or programs in the School of Social Work or the University of Pittsburgh;
  • Planning of the student’s educational program in accordance with his or her career interests.

Phi Alpha National Honor Society

Mu Omicron Chapter

Phi Alpha Honor Society was created to provide a closer bond between social work students and the profession in order to promote humanitarian goals and ideals. With the motto, “Through knowledge-the challenge to serve,” Phi Alpha fosters high standards of education for social workers and invites into membership those who have attained excellence in scholarship and achievement in social work. Founded in 1960, Phi Alpha Honor Society currently has more than 110 chapters nationwide.

School of Social Work Faculty

Yodit Betru, Director, MSW Program and Assistant Professor, DSW, University of Pennsylvania

Jaime Booth, Associate Dean of Research, Associate Professor, PhD, Arizona State University

Laura Borish, CWEB/CWEL Agency Coordinator and Field Assistant Professor, MSW, University of Pittsburgh

Helen Cahalane, Principal Investigator, Child Welfare Education and Research Programs, Clinical Associate Professor, PhD, University of Pittsburgh

Melvin Cherry, Jr., Field Education Coordinator and Assistant Professor, MSW, University of Pittsburgh

Kyaien O. Conner, Donald M. Henderson Endowed Chair, Director of the Center on Race and Social Problems, Associate Dean for Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion, and Professor, PhD, University of Pittsburgh

John Dalessandro, Field Education Coordinator and Assistant Professor, MSW, University of Pittsburgh

Amy DeGurian, Field Education Coordinator and Assistant Professor, MSW, University of Pittsburgh

Aliya Durham, Assistant Professor and Director of Community Engagement, MSW, MPIA, University of Pittsburgh

Shawn M. Eack, James and Noel Browne Endowed Chair, Associate Dean for Research, and Professor of Social Work and Professor of Psychiatry, PhD, University of Pittsburgh

Stephanie Eckstrom, Program Coordinator, Pitt-Bradford MSW Program, MSW, University of Maryland At Baltimore

Elizabeth M.Z. Farmer, Dean, PhD, Duke University

Victor Figuereo, Assistant Professor, PhD, Boston College

Rachel Gartner, Assistant Professor, PhD, University of California-Berkeley

Sara Goodkind, Director of PhD Program, Associate Professor, School of Social Work, Department of Sociology, and Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies Program, PhD, University of Michigan

Catherine Greeno, Associate Professor and Doctoral Program Director, PhD, Stanford University

James Huguley, Interim Director, Center on Race and Social Problems and Assistant Professor, EdD, Harvard University

Ron Idoko, Associate Director of the Center on Race and Social Problems, Founding Director of the Racial Equity Consciousness Institute, and Research Assistant Professor, MSW, University of Pittsburgh

Leah Jacobs, Assistant Professor, PhD, University of California-Berkeley

Alicia Johnson, CWEL Academic Coordinator, Clinical Assistant Professor, PhD, Robert Morris University

Nev Jones, Associate Professor, PhD,

Toya Jones, BASW Program Director and Assistant Professor, EdD, University of Pittsburgh

Travis Labrum, Associate Professor, PhD, University of Pittsburgh

Alicia Melnick, Field Education Coordinator and Lecturer, MSW, University of Pittsburgh

Deborah Moon, Assistant Professor, PhD, University of Kansas

Beth Mulvaney, Clinical Assistant Professor, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Mary L. Ohmer, COSA Chair and Associate Professor, PhD, University of Pittsburgh

Marlo Perry, Research Assistant Professor, Child Welfare Education and Research Programs, PhD, University of Pennsylvania

Helen Petracchi, Associate Professor; Director, PhD, University of Wisconsin at Madison

Suzanne Pritzker, Professor and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, PhD,

Mary Elizabeth Rauktis, Research Associate Professor, PhD, University of Pittsburgh

Brooke Rawls, Assistant Professor, Academic Coordinator for the CWEB program, PhD, Robert Morris University

Deborah Robinson, Practicum Assistant Professor, MSW, University of Pittsburgh

Daniel Rosen, Professor, PhD, University of Michigan

Jeffrey Shook, Associate Professor, PhD, University of Michigan

Tonya Slawinski, Director of Practicum Education, PhD, University of Pittsburgh

Fengyan Tang, Professor, PhD, Washington University in St. Louis

Misha Zorich, MSW Program Director, UPJ, MSW, University of Pittsburgh

Program and Course Offerings

Social Work, BASW

Degree Requirements

The School of Social Work requires a minimum of 120 credits for graduation. The courses listed below are required of all students working toward the Bachelor of Arts in Social Work:

Social work courses:

A total of 48 credits in the social work major:

  • SOCWRK 1000 - INTRODUCTION TO SOCIAL WORK

This is a service-learning course and requires 45 hours of volunteer service as part of the course.

  • SOCWRK 1005 - FOUNDATIONS OF THE WELFARE STATE
  • SOCWRK 1006 - POLICY ANALYSIS

This is a service-learning course and requires 45 hours of volunteer service as part of the course.

  • SOCWRK 1008 - GENERALIST SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE WITH DIVERSE POPULATIONS
  • SOCWRK 1011 - INTRODUCTION TO GENERALIST METHODS: SOCIAL WORK WITH INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES
  • SOCWRK 1012 - SOCIAL WORK WITH COMMUNITIES AND ORGANIZATIONS
  • SOCWRK 1013 - SOCIAL WORK WITH GROUPS
  • SOCWRK 1015 - HUMAN BEHAVR & SOCL ENVIRONMENT
  • SOCWRK 1020 - INTRODUCTION TO SOCIAL WORK RESEARCH
  • SOCWRK 1024 - PRACTICUM SEMINAR AND LAB 1
  • SOCWRK 1025 - PRACTICUM 1
  • SOCWRK 1026 - PRACTICUM SEMINAR AND LAB 2
  • SOCWRK 1027 - PRACTICUM 2
  • SOCWRK Elective
Social work elective courses:

  General Education Requirements Categories:    

  Africana Studies 

3

  Anthropology 

3

  English Composition   

3

  Economics  

3

  Global Studies 

3

  Gender, Sexuality & Women’s Studies  

3

  Human Biology   

3

  Political Science   

3

  Religion/Spirituality 

3

  Psychology 

3

  Statistics   

3

  Sociology 

3

 

Note:

  • Course of equivalent content may have been taken at another institution.

** These courses/credits (in part or in whole) may have been taken as part of the 60 credits required for admission. Any of these courses/credits not taken prior to admission must be completed prior to graduation.

Social Work Minor

Minor requirements:

The minor requires successful completion of 15 credits (with a grade of C- or better) of the following three-credit courses:

  • SOCWRK 1000 - INTRODUCTION TO SOCIAL WORK

This is a service-learning course and requires 45 hours of volunteer service as part of the course.

  • SOCWRK 1005 - FOUNDATIONS OF THE WELFARE STATE
  • SOCWRK 1006 - POLICY ANALYSIS

This is a service-learning course and requires 45 hours of volunteer service as part of the course.

  • SOCWRK 1035 - GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES SOCIAL WORK
  • SOCWRK 1040 - POVERTY AND INCOME INEQUALITY
  • SOCWRK 1050 - RACE AND SOCIAL PROBLEMS
  • SOCWRK 1058 - ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL WORK
  • SOCWRK 1059 - CHILD AND FAMILY ADVOCACY
  • SOCWRK 1063 - AFRICAN AMERICAN HEALTH ISSUES
  • SOCWRK 1079 - CHILD WELFARE SERVICES
  • AFRCNA 1710 - AFRICAN AMERICAN MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES
Note:
  • SOCWRK 1000 - INTRODUCTION TO SOCIAL WORK is required for all subsequent courses, with the exception of SOCWRK 1005
  • Courses are not available every semester.

Return to School of Social Work Return to: School of Social Work



Catalog Navigation