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About Us

What we do

At Calvin, you'll be prepared to do more than just live in the world as successful members of society. Through our sociology and social work programs, you will develop the skills and virtues necessary to bring healing to a broken world.

You'll explore people and the groups they form. You'll examine groups of people at work, at play, in mourning and more—because you'll learn to appreciate and understand many facets of human experience.

Why study sociology?

A simple question—a complex answer.

At Calvin, you'll study sociology as just one aspect of your God-given vocation. We believe that God created all things good—including humans and the relationships we form. Yet through human beings, sin entered the world. We experience tension and disorder in our social relationships.

But that isn't the end of the story.

God doesn't allow this social disorder to prevail. His son, Jesus Christ, sacrificed himself to redeem human disobedience, thus offering the hope of ongoing renewal in creation.

Discovering ways to heal and renew social relationships

So here you are. You live in a fallen world. You see suffering and injustice in society, in intergroup relationships and in yourself. At Calvin, you'll study sociology and social work to better understand human relationships and the way in which sin affects them.

And you won't stop there.

As you learn, you'll get involved in creative solutions that answer the pressing needs of our society. Through classes, off-campus study programs, internships, and more, you'll discover ways in which God is calling us to be agents of renewal—working for social change here in the United States and in all the world.

What is social work?

Social work's origins lie in early 20th-century efforts to meet the needs of neglected children, exploited workers and those living in poverty. Early social workers led in the struggle for child-labor laws, more humane working conditions, voting rights for women and other reforms.

Social work is a dynamic and expanding profession that struggles with social concerns as varied as child abuse, drug addiction, housing and homelessness, aging and mental illness.

Professional social workers continue to advocate for their clients and also perform a wide range of needed services, including:

  • Adoption services
  • Community organizing
  • Counseling with patients and families experiencing traumatic illnesses
  • Rehabilitative services for emotionally or physically impaired people

They work in diverse settings such as government agencies, private industry, schools, faith-based organizations, neighborhood centers and health care organizations.

BSW Accreditation

Our BSW program is accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE). The CSWE Educational Policy and Accreditation Standards (EPAS) promotes academic excellence in BSW and Master of Social Work (MSW) education. The EPAS specifies the curricular content and educational context to prepare you for professional social work practice. Our program is a competency-based education which uses an outcome performance approach to curriculum design. Assessment is an integral part of this competency-based education. Our system of assessment is implemented annually. View the most recent summary of assessment results (pdf). You can also view Form AS 4(B) (pdf).

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Accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) Board of Accreditation

Calvin University’s Bachelor of Social Work program is accredited by the Council on Social Work Education’s Board of Accreditation.

Accreditation of a baccalaureate or master’s social work program by the Council on Social Work Education’s Board of Accreditation indicates that it meets or exceeds criteria for the assessment of program quality evaluated through a peer review process. An accredited program has sufficient resources to meet its mission and goals and the Board of Accreditation has verified that it demonstrates compliance with all sections of the Educational Policy and Accreditation Standards.

Accreditation applies to all program sites and program delivery methods of an accredited program. Accreditation provides reasonable assurance about the quality of the program and the competence of students graduating from the program.

Licensure

Baccalaureate Social Work (BSW) License by State-by-State (pdf)

Our mission

The mission of the BSW program is to prepare you for competent and effective entry-level generalist practice in social work within the context of a Christian Reformed, liberal arts education.

Our goals

  1. To prepare students for competent and effective entry-level, generalist practice with individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities.
  2. To promote and develop in students an understanding of social work knowledge, values, and skills with a strengths perspective emphasis.
  3. To prepare students for professional practice within the context of a Christian Reformed, liberal arts perspective—particularly its emphasis on the pursuit of interpersonal, social, and economic justice with diverse persons.

Our "strengths perspective"

As Calvin's BSW program has matured, we have come to believe that transforming broken relationships at all levels of society is best accomplished by practitioners focusing on and identifying the strengths of clients and the directions in which they want to apply them. We believe this "strengths emphasis," addressed in many of the courses in the social work major, reflects the redemptive theology of a Reformed, Christian outlook.