THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

FLC and University of Denver offer Five Year Combined Master of Social Work Degree Program

By Ryan Simonovich

Author: Bodine, James/Thursday, September 21, 2017/Categories: Home, Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

Fort Lewis College and the University of Denver Graduate School of Social Work are currently recruiting for a combined undergraduate and graduate degree program. The program allows FLC students to complete their bachelor’s degree as well as a Master of Social Work degree in five years.

 

Students are regular undergraduate students at FLC for the first three years of the program, Wanda Ellingson, Program Director of Four Corners MSW Program said. Liberal Arts Core requirements and major specific requirements must be completed, as well as at least 90 credits.

 

The fourth year of the program students would be in their senior year at FLC, but they are enrolled with DU Graduate School of Social Work and pay DU tuition. At the end of the fourth year, 30 credit hours are transferred back for the student to earn their bachelor's degree from FLC, Ellingson said.

 

 

In the student’s fifth year, the student is a DU graduate student. Upon completion of the fifth year, students are awarded with a Master of Social Work degree, she said.

  

Eligible undergraduate majors are Psychology, Anthropology, Public Health, Gender and Women’s Studies and Sociology.  

 

Courses are taught by local professors in Durango, satellite professors in Denver and online courses ran by professors in Denver, Ellingson said. Denver professors will come to Durango a few times per semester, and the remaining lessons are taught via video conferencing. The online courses are optional, she said.  

 

 

The graduate program is run by DU Four Corners out of the Commons Building on Camino Del Rio. They were established in 2002, and Master of Social Work is their only degree, Ellingson said.     

 

 

“We wanted to really bring a professional program where we could train social workers to work in these agencies,” Ellingson said.  

 

 

The program focuses on the needs rural and tribal communities that are found in Southwest Colorado and the surrounding areas. Rural communities face isolation, poverty and people live far from resources such as medical care and other services, she said.

 

Master of Social Work candidates are trained to work with individuals, with families and groups, and at the legislative level, she said.

 

“The MSW degree provides the broadest scope of practice in any of the professional degrees,” she said.

 

This partnership between the two institutions has been in place since 2010, and has seen 11 FLC students participate, Ellingson said.

 

Outside majors may be unaware of this program but word is spreading to undergraduate students as well as prospective freshmen, Megan Wrona, Assistant Professor of Psychology at FLC said.

 

“I think the advisors are doing a lot more talking about the program,” she said.

 

Only 25 students are accepted into the graduate program each cycle, including FLC students participating in the combined program as well as non-FLC students, Ellingson said.

 

The next cycle of the two year graduate program begins in the Fall of 2018. Current juniors at FLC can apply to the program, and begin graduate school next fall, she said. Applications for the 2018-2020 program are being accepted starting in October 2017 and ending May 1, 2018.

 

Follow Ryan Simonovich on twitter @Ryanasimono for regular updates from around Durango, and stay up to date with FLC campus news by following @flcindependent and checking theindyonline.com.

 

Print

Number of views (3066)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Cookin' Stuff with Scout

Scout Edmondson

Tasty recipes for the hungry college student

  Just because you may be young, broke and stressed out about classes doesn’t mean you have to eat like a dog! These fall-centric, diet-restriction-friendly recipes for the hungry college student are easy to make, inexpensive and filling. They’re also made with ingredients that can be found in the Grubhub or ones that won’t break the bank at the grocery store....

On The Rocks

By: AJ Repinski

Confused by FLC’s alcohol policy? It’s not as bad as you think.

College students and alcohol–a classic stereotype. While prohibited at Fort Lewis College, the details around the drug and alcohol policy can be confusing.  “I know nothing about it,” Avery Wickes, a philosophy student at FLC, said. Charlie Johann, an economics and philosophy major, stated he is not familiar with the policies, aside from the Zero Tolerance rule for...

Nook of the Week

By: AJ Repinski

Check out a study spot in Schlessman Family Hall 

  Located in the newly constructed Schlessman Family Hall building, study space 1001A is convenient for any student. Tucked away by the southeast entrance, the Terry R. Bacon and Debra Parmenter Study is a short walk from the clock tower.   Study space 1001A features two armless chairs and several electrical outlets for finishing homework, and is open during normal...

Indy on the Street

By: Morgan Smith, Lisia Lucero, AJ Repinski, Logan Roybal

Learn what's on some of the minds of our FLC student-body right now.

  Welcome back to campus, Skyhawks! School is in full swing, and as we get back into the groove of things, let’s hear some thoughts from some of our Fort Lewis College students.    Question: What’s bothering you right now?   Ovio Redling Freshman   The bathrooms in Camp Hall used to be gender neutral, but they recently changed them...

Head Over Heals for the FLC Mini-Ramp

Reported and Photographed by: AJ Repinski

A skateboarder's grind to improvement.

John Norsen, an environmental biology student, drops in at the Fort Lewis College mini-ramp. Located behind the Center of Southwest Studies building, students attend the park to have fun with friends after classes, he said.    Norsen locks into a trick.   An accidental weight-shift sends Norsen falling to his back. While skateboarding can be a challenge,...

First567810121314Last