Educating Tomorrow’s Social Work Practitioners
Educating Tomorrow’s Social Work Practitioners
Students in our top-ranked MSW program aren’t just scholars—they’re also researchers who collaborate with faculty on compelling projects and practitioners who spend two to three days per week working in schools, nonprofits, and hospitals through our robust field placement program.
You will choose between clinical or macro. The clinical program teaches students how to integrate evidence-based interventions. Macro social work aims to affect change within large systems at the community, organizational, and policy levels.
We challenge and prepare our clinical program students to integrate evidence-based interventions and culturally sensitive practice with individuals, couples, families, and groups. Students become proficient in assessment and diagnostic classification and learn to develop professional therapeutic alliance and relationship skills.
Through coursework and field practice, students are exposed to a broad overview of therapeutic interventions and have an opportunity to develop advanced practice skills and therapeutic techniques.
Macro social work aims to affect change within large systems at the community, organizational, and policy levels. BCSSW’s macro specialization focuses on social innovation and leadership, emphasizing the development of ideas, mechanisms, and new social arrangements to enhance community capacity to address complex social challenges. Students train in the foundations of participatory community-based social work practice and research and learn recent advances in human-centered design, systems thinking, and other analytical tools to drive innovation, address complex social problems, and enable sustained social impact.
In their coursework and field internships, students gain practice skills that focus on advocacy, leadership and administration, financial management and resource development, and novel approaches to drive social change and advance the common good.
Within either specialized practice (clinical or macro), you will develop expertise by selecting one of six fields of practice.
Build additional knowledge and specialized skills by completing an optional certificate. Certificates give students the opportunity to build knowledge in subject-specific areas of social work. Certificates require the completion of three specified courses within a chosen area.
Our MSW program consists of 12 required courses and 5 electives.
Each semester there are 50+ electives to choose from.
With electives, students can customize their curriculum plan, deepen their knowledge, or venture into an area of practice that is new and fascinating.
Our full-time, two-year MSW program offers a rigorous curriculum, valuable field education opportunities, and the ability to customize your degree by selecting a specialization and field of practice and pursuing optional certificates in a range of subjects.
Our three- or four-year MSW program offers the rigorous curriculum and valuable field experience of our full-time program in a flexible format that accommodates your busy schedule.
For those working in human services settings, the part-time program provides classroom learning that supports your work experience. Classes meet once per week and run between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m. to accommodate your schedule. The opportunity to use your current job as a practicum opens the door for working people to continue to earn a living while pursuing an MSW.
To have the greatest impact, it is crucial that our curriculum, field placements, and research be informed through collaboration with the people they are meant to serve. Our initiatives encourage our students to develop a more nuanced understanding of the challenges faced by specific populations, so they can move us closer to solutions.
The BLI supports, develops, and prepares practitioners to address issues faced by the Black community, taking an Afrocentric approach to social work practice that emphasizes community, collective action, and cultural context. BLI students take courses on the African diaspora and complete field placements within Black communities.
The TII integrates trauma-informed theory, practice, and principles into the curriculum, field education, and research. It addresses the impact of trauma on individuals, families, and communities and prepares students to help their clients cope with trauma as well as guard themselves against its effects.
BCSSW offers three dual degree graduate programs in partnership with other schools at Boston College. Students interested in the dual degree program must be admitted independently to the respective schools.
We also offer a BA/MSW degree for Boston College undergraduates.
The Advanced Standing MSW is an accelerated program that allows you to complete your master's degree in only three semesters so you can start making positive change in your community sooner.
Our Advanced Standing program was developed for students who have already proven their commitment to improving vulnerable lives by earning a bachelor’s degree in social work (BSW) from a program accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE).
All students are able to choose their course of study (macro or clinical); one of six fields of practice; and over 50 electives. Advanced Standing students can complete up to two certificates.
Advanced Standing MSW students can choose from two accelerated tracks — one that begins in January, and one that begins in May.
Students in the School of Social Work receive professional training from organizations throughout the Greater Boston area, providing them with critical on-the-ground experience that enhances their classroom learning and prepares them for successful careers. We've cultivated strong relationships with our agency partners, enabling you to choose from more than 1,000 opportunities. You'll receive mentoring and support every step of the way.
The Afrocentric perspective centers African people as active participants in shaping their experiences. We equip MSW students with tools to critically examine social work from an African-centered lens, exploring Afrocentric practices, the African diaspora, and African contributions to civilization.
Children, Youth, & Families students intern in schools, non-profits, and health centers addressing trauma, poverty, homelessness, health, and immigrant integration. Advanced courses focus on activity-based therapy for youth, family therapy models, and school social work licensure.
Focused on human rights, security, development, and sustainable solutions to social issues. Students work with domestic or international partners on projects like supporting refugees, drafting immigration policies, preventing violence, and developing sustainable programs globally.
Clinical students focus on building strong assessment skills and learning evidence-based interventions for individuals, couples, families, and groups. Macro students develop policy, planning, and management skills to lead and advocate. Graduates work in health/behavioral health settings.
Using an asset-based approach, students explore the barriers Latinx populations face in accessing education, social services, and healthcare, while learning to apply evidence-based interventions. In a Spanish-taught cohort, students intern with area partners.
Clinical students focus on developing strong trauma-informed assessment skills and learning evidence-based treatment interventions to work with individuals, couples, families, and groups in behavioral health settings.
This certificate program enables MSW students to build their research skills while exploring their interest in research-related careers. As part of the program, students take two statistics courses with first-year doctoral students.
This certificate program prepares students to support the health and well-being of older adults and their families. As part of the program, students will gain specialized knowledge and skills for working with older adults in health and mental health settings and understanding the policy landscape affecting aging societies.
This certificate program prepares students to develop solutions to complex problems facing Black communities. As part of the program, students explore anti-Black racism, racial trauma, and systemic barriers that perpetuate inequities, as well as how the history of activism among Black people has shaped modern-day advocacy.
This certificate program prepares students to support the health and well-being of children. As part of the program, students will learn how to advocate for policies that improve the lives of children and families; explore issues such as adoption, foster care, and family reunification; and examine a range of modalities for assessing and treating youth who have experienced trauma.
This certificate prepares students to work with communities to create scalable interventions for positive social change, with a particular focus on prototyping and testing new products and services.
This certificate program trains master’s and doctoral students to develop a deep understanding of the needs of children and families whose lives are shaped by early childhood programs, services, and policies.
This certificate program enables students to build a strong understanding of humanitarian issues, systems, and practices both at home and abroad, placing special emphasis on taking person-centered approaches to human mobility, collaborating across sectors, and engaging with diverse communities in crisis. Courses include online modules designed by faculty and staff from the BCSSW Global Practice program in conjunction with internationally renowned subject experts.
This certificate program, taught partly in Spanish, prepares students to work with Latinx individuals, families, and communities. As part of the program, students examine their own perspectives of the world; develop a strong understanding of the biopsychosocial dimensions of different Latinx populations; and gain awareness of the complex factors affecting Latinx immigrants.
This certificate program prepares students to improve equity in the workplace for women, people of color, and other marginalized employees. Those who earn the certificate will be well-positioned to take on leadership roles in equity, justice, and inclusion programs at colleges, public agencies, and private companies.
This certificate program prepares students to understand the biological processes of human development throughout the lifespan, with a primary focus on neuroscience and an introduction to genetics. Through coursework, students learn how to read and comprehend neuroscience research and methodologies; build a rich vocabulary in biology; understand how to appropriately include neuroscientific findings in practice such as psychoeducation; and more deeply understand the human experience through the lens of the brain. Students gain an understanding of how the brain builds and changes over time, while considering contexts relevant to social work such as caregiving, material hardship, loneliness, love, and toxic stress. During the program, they select a topic of interest, such as mood disorder or sleep, and delve into examining its neurobiological underpinnings in a final project that is meaningful for society and that illustrates the importance of factoring biological perspectives into understanding the human experience in context.
This certificate program equips students with in-depth knowledge of issues facing migrants and refugees while giving them the foundational skills to implement interventions with these populations both at home and abroad. Courses place special emphasis on taking person-centered approaches to human mobility, collaborating across sectors, and engaging with diverse communities in crisis.
This certificate program prepares students to practice social work in school-based settings. As part of the program, students receive a comprehensive overview of education policy while developing the skills to effectively communicate with teachers, school personnel, and diverse families.
This certificate program prepares students to work with survivors of trauma, with a particular emphasis on linking social justice to clinical practice in an effort to better understand survivors, their experiences, and evidence-based interventions. Students develop clinical skills to address a broad range of trauma experiences while enhancing their knowledge of emerging theories and topics in trauma practice.
Reflect, discern, and grow—in the classroom and in the field.
Learn why the Boston College School of Social Work is consistently nationally ranked among its peers. With rigorous, hands-on experience paired with a close-knit community, our students graduate ready to make a difference in their chosen field.
Our current students and alumni serve communities locally and across the globe, sustaining positive social change through critical work.