¶ … social workers being trained with sufficient coursework and field-level research assignments as regards the alcohol-related issues some of their future clients will be challenged with? Are college and university faculty -- those instructors that train and prepare social workers -- including pertinent coursework in the curricula that adequately prepares social workers vis-a-vis the alcohol-related problems they will invariably encounter in the future? Is there a gap between what social workers are learning in masters-level classes (MSW) and what they will actually need to know in terms of their ability to achieve success with problem drinkers? The answer to the first two questions -- based on the literature -- is a solid "no"; and the answer to the third question in this introduction is "yes" (Richardson, 2008).
The Literature and Relevance to Social Work Practice
In the Journal of Social Work the author reports on a 2005 study of 89 masters-level social work practitioners in New York State; all 89 were members of the New York State Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers. When surveyed as to whether they were required to take alcohol-related coursework during their masters degree programs, less than 3% reported that they had taken a mandatory course on alcohol abuse as it relates to...
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