每日大赛

Four students sit at cubicle desks in the library.
Adelphi students are being trained to adapt to changing times for the social work profession.

Under the second Trump administration, the social work profession is facing unprecedented challenges鈥攏ew executive orders have upended traditional methods of social work practice, cutting communities off from vital resources and leaving practitioners to scramble.

But during this time, the 每日大赛 School of Social Work (SSW) remains committed to the profession鈥檚 core values and to the University鈥檚 goal of an inclusive, connected community.

On the Front Lines鈥攊n the Library

Practicums are the signature pedagogy of social work education, typically completed at a social services agency. Several years ago, the School of Social Work began to build out a new branch of practicum placements: libraries.

鈥淟ibraries are embedded in their communities and are therefore an organic fit for practicums,鈥 said Livia Polise, director of field education at the School. She and her colleagues have successfully implemented partnerships with libraries throughout the tristate area, from Nassau County to the Hudson Valley.

Now these partnerships are becoming a 鈥渓ifeline鈥 for communities, Polise said. 鈥淟ibraries continue to provide social work services in places when other models of service provision have been disrupted.鈥 As agencies downsize and shutter in response to executive orders, patrons can turn to library social workers for free, no-questions-asked help with housing, domestic violence, food security, healthcare, employment and mental health.

Micah Schneider, a faculty practicum liaison for the School, said the experience of a library placement has changed overnight. 鈥淟ast fall, my students were doing very typical work: filling out SNAP applications for patrons, facilitating staff trainings, sitting in on support groups.鈥 When the new executive orders began to take effect, however, library patrons began to panic, and social work students had to step up fast. Now, they鈥檙e working on the front lines, right alongside their clients. 鈥淪tudents have been the first line of contact for people who are having mental health crises or can鈥檛 get a passport,鈥 Schneider said.

In libraries and other practicum placements, Adelphi students are undertaking work that鈥檚 central to one of the University鈥檚 strategic goals: fostering stronger community ties while maximizing a shared purpose. 鈥淥ur interns have to walk around the library, talk to people, let people know they鈥檙e there and how they can help,鈥 Polise said. 鈥淚n essence, they have to build community.鈥

Providing Personalized Support in Tough Times

鈥淲e meet people where they are.鈥 It鈥檚 a common phrase in the social work profession, one that honors a client鈥檚 background, choices, and strengths and limitations alike. As students complete what Schneider calls 鈥渋ncredibly difficult鈥 placements, SSW faculty are granting them the same treatment.

For Schneider, whose students are holding 鈥渧ery heavy stories,鈥 a temperature check is always necessary. 鈥淚 make sure the student is grounded and feels safe where they are. Sometimes the weight of what they鈥檙e seeing in the field right now is overwhelming. There鈥檚 so much fear, anxiety, loss.鈥

Many Adelphi students are dealing with the personal consequences that have come with the recent change of administrations, both out loud and in private. The University is meeting them there, too. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 know the life experiences or circumstances that our community members carry with them each day,鈥 Polise said. 鈥淏ut Adelphi has to be a loud ally anyway. When we鈥檙e not explicit about inclusion, the implicit message is one of exclusion.鈥

Equipping and Empowering Students

On campus, School of Social Work faculty and staff are creating spaces to empower student action. This is also part of the School鈥檚 learning approach: teaching students how to make an impact outside of one-to-one client work. As Polise said, 鈥淪ocial work isn鈥檛 always about sitting with a client. Sometimes it鈥檚 about 鈥榤acro鈥 work, which is about engaging with systems and structures, being a good citizen and advocating for policy reform.

The School sponsors an annual, schoolwide social action activity that trains students to become advocates for social change. Practicum courses include professional development activities emphasizing antiracism, diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging, which have been expanded to include regular community engagement and action spaces. In these sessions, students learn more about recent political developments and how to effectively contact their legislative representatives. 鈥淲e want to make sure students know what to expect and especially how they can incorporate their own stories,鈥 Polise said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 coach them to say anything in particular. We tell them, 鈥楩ind something that鈥檚 important to you and make a call.鈥欌

Polise鈥檚 team is also hosting a series of聽 professional development workshops that spotlight diverse communities. At a time when divisive rhetoric is on the rise, these workshops enable students to process lived experiences that differ from their own. But reflection is not the end goal, even if students are revisiting problematic assumptions or gaining cultural competency. 鈥淭he point is to act,鈥 Polise said. 鈥淭hey should be thinking about how to better support people and communities in their work.鈥

Staying Committed to the Road Ahead

With so many methods, practices and systems in flux, SSW students are building a new foundation, digging deep into the roots of their profession. 鈥淚t鈥檚 innately political,鈥 Schneider said. 鈥淥ur role is to protect the marginalized. But my students know that. That鈥檚 why they鈥檙e still doing this, even when it鈥檚 difficult.鈥

Professor Elizabeth Palley, JD, PhD, director of the School of Social Work PhD program, who has taught at Adelphi for more than 20 years, said students today are far more politically engaged than they once were鈥攁 product of the University鈥檚 efforts to diversify its student body. 鈥淭here are fewer students coming in because they want to be private therapists,鈥 Dr. Palley said. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e felt the impact of policy on their communities firsthand.鈥

Even as the current federal administration seeks to eliminate programs aimed at diversity and inclusion, Dr. Palley notes that the . 鈥淚n order to reapply for accreditation, we still have to demonstrate how we鈥檙e addressing DEI and antiracism,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e working to comply with the CSWE鈥檚 requirements.鈥

While the future of social work is unclear under the current federal administration, School of Social Work students and faculty remain committed to the school鈥檚 mission: living out social justice in everything they do. In fact, Schneider, who formerly served as the School鈥檚 assistant director of practicum education, elected to leave their full-time role at Adelphi last year and join a nonprofit organization. 鈥淚 was so moved by the stories I was hearing daily from students in the trenches with their clients,鈥 they said. 鈥淚 found myself longing to be there with them, side by side.鈥

Adelphi鈥檚 School of Social Work does not advocate for particular political positions or base our work on who holds elected office鈥攚e equip our students with the education and tools to enact their own values and serve the community鈥檚 needs.
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