Program Pathway Options

Social Work, Social Policy, and Social Administration

The Crown Family School will introduce a new curriculum beginning in the fall of 2024  for the Master of Arts Program in Social Work, Social Policy, and Social Administration designed to respond to changing societal problems and equip students with the critical skills, competencies, and values to expand their career opportunities and heighten their impact. 

Discover your Path 

Key components and characteristics of our new integrated curriculum equip students with the ability to address complex, evolving, and multifaceted social issues to affect social change. There are five distinct pathways that include:

  • Transforming Justice & Violence Prevention
  • Integrating Health, Mental Health & Social Care
  •  Disrupting Poverty, Economic Inequality, & Social Exclusion
  • Children and Families in System Contexts
  • Global Health & Social Development 

Each pathway will allow students to embark on a transformative journey grounded in inquiry, impact, and excellence.  We invite you to join a community of forward-thinkers where impactful ideas can spark innovation and genuine collaboration can shape the future with passion and possibilities. This exploration is the beginning of an authentic, transformative educational experience.

Our program pathway options are designed to train students to work across levels of practice- with individuals, organizations, communities, and government- providing flexibility to pursue a range of careers, from direct service to public policy, working domestically and globally. 

 

Program Pathway Options

Explore Your Pathway - Ignite Change Today

Students pursuing the Transforming Justice and Violence Prevention pathway are prepared to become effective clinicians, advocates, leaders, and change agents to transform models of justice, promote violence prevention, and improve social conditions. Coursework, combined with field education, equips students with the knowledge to understand the root causes of violence and the necessary tools to recognize, analyze, and prevent various forms of violence to address inequities in (and associated with) the criminal-legal system. The ultimate goal is to provide students with a deep understanding of the criminal legal system and the skills they need to intervene, whether that is at the individual, organizational, community, or policy level, to examine varied and alternative systems of justice and build better policies, programs, services, and practices for people and communities affected by the criminal legal system.

Discover Diverse Field Placement Destinations

Alternatives Inc
Chicago Appleseed
Chicago CRED
Chicago Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights
Chicago Torture Justice Center
Cook County Sheriff's Treatment Response Team
Federal Defender Program
Gro Community
Illinois Justice Project
Restore Justice 

 

Explore Exciting Career Possibilities
911/Crisis Call Co-Responder
Conflict Mediator
Director of Policy
Executive Director 
Forensic Social Worker
Guardian ad Litem
Law Enforcement Counselor
Legal Advocate
Legal Professionals Trainer
Mitigation or Arbitration Specialist
Policy Analyst
Sex Offender Clinician

Students pursuing the Integrating Health, Mental Health, and Social Care pathway are equipped with the specialized knowledge and skills needed to work effectively at the intersection of healthcare, mental health, disabilities, and social services. Coursework, combined with field education, prepares students to provide comprehensive, person-centered care, which demands integration of the following systems: physical health, mental health, substance use disorders, disability services, and social needs. This pathway encourages interprofessional education (IPE) and provides opportunities for collaboration to prepare social workers to work as effective integrated health team members. Along with the appropriate level of practice courses, this pathway can prepare students to be practice-ready for interpersonal (clinical) social work with individuals, groups, and communities in a broad range of settings, including disabilities services, gerontology, hospitals, and other health settings, alcohol and other substance abuse settings, community mental health and private practice. The pathway can also prepare students at the macro-level to think strategically about reform and implementation across a range of integrated health systems policies and programs and to provide integrated health advocacy

Discover Diverse Field Placement Destinations

A Safe Haven Foundation
Above and Beyond Recovery Center
Access Living of  Metropolitan Chicago
Advocate Illinois Masonic Behavioral Health Services
Aging Care Connections
Center on Halsted
Center for Disability and Elder Law
Chicago Women’s Health Center
CJE Senior Life Counseling Services
Howard Brown Health Center
Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago
Northwestern Memorial Hospital
SkyArt Project IMPACT
The Kedzie Center 
Trilogy Behavioral Health Care
UChicago Medicine
Wildflower Center for Emotional Health

 

 

Explore Exciting Career Possibilities

Behavioral Health Associate
Case Manager
Clinical Director
Clinical Social Worker
Clinical Therapist
Center on Halsted
Center for Disability and Elder Law
Counselor
CJE Senior Life Counseling Services
Director of Clinical Training
Drug and Alcohol Counselor
Director of Clinical Training
Drug and Alcohol Counselor
Executive Director
Health Policy Research
Hospice Social Worker
Medical Social Worker
Medical Psychiatry Social Worker
Policy Research
Wellness Coach

 

 

Students pursuing this pathway are equipped with the knowledge, skills, and perspectives necessary to address and combat poverty, economic inequality, and social exclusion within society. The curriculum focuses on understanding the root causes of poverty, economic inequality, and social exclusion and their impacts on children, families, organizations, and communities across practice levels designed to elevate the economic well-being of individuals, families, and communities. Systems that receive particular attention in this pathway include those that address economic security, such as social safety net programs like conditional and unconditional cash transfers, food assistance and anti-hunger programs, and housing assistance for renters and the unhoused, as well as systems that address employment, work-family wellbeing, and children’s short- and long-term material wellbeing such as labor market policies, workforce development, employment programs, family leave and child care policies, and child tax credits. The ultimate goal is to equip students with the skills they need to engage across levels of practice—direct practice, grassroots organizing, program management, cross-sector collaboration, and/or policy analysis and advocacy—so that they can mitigate poverty, economic inequality, and exclusion and improve the life chances of the most marginalized among us. 

Discover Diverse Field Placement Destinations
Chicago Commons
Chicago Jobs Council
Deborah’s Place
Facing Forward
Heartland Human Care Services Supportive Housing Services
Illinois Hunger Coalition 
Lakeview Pantry Home Delivery Program
LIFT Chicago
Sarah’s Circle
Sunshine Enterprises
Thresholds
YMCA Metro of Chicago Housing Social Services
Youth Empowerment Performance Project

 

Explore Exciting Career Possibilities
Career Counselor
Case Manager
Community Education Specialist
Community Liaison
Community Organizer
Community Support Specialist
Crisis Support Specialist
Direct Practice Specialist
Food Insecurity Specialist
Housing Advocates/Specialist
Job Coach
Public Policy Director

Students pursuing the Children and Families in Systems Context pathway have the knowledge, skills, and perspectives necessary to advocate for, support, and implement policies and practices that enhance the well-being and life prospects of children, adolescents, adults, and family systems.  Courses focus on understanding human development within and across diverse ethnic and cultural contexts to create holistic interventions for individuals and families across the lifespan. Systems of support that receive particular attention include infant and early childhood services, education and schools, community-based mental health systems, child welfare systems, and elder care systems. 

Discover Diverse Field Placement Destinations
Chicago Children’s Advocacy Center
Child Link Counseling Department
Chicago Public Schools 
Children’s Research Triangle
Distinctive Schools
Juvenile Protective Association
Kids Above All
Metropolitan Family Services
National Runaway Safeline
UCAN Family Works Program
UChicago Medical Center 1000 Words 
Start Early 

 

Explore Exciting Career Possibilities
Case Manager
Case Manager/Supervisor
Children’s Advocate
Child Welfare Specialist
Child Welfare Worker
Clinical Social Worker
Health Educator
Hospice Social Worker
Infant Mental Health Specialist
School Social Worker

Students pursuing the Global Health and Social Development pathway are equipped with the knowledge, skills, and perspectives necessary to address social problems, social policy, and on-the-ground practice in a globalized world. The curriculum focuses on understanding the root causes of global inequality by providing foundational knowledge on global processes, historical trends, and comparative perspectives, and a set of skills that are particularly important for working in a global context or working with populations from other non-US cultural contexts including intercultural awareness, self-reflection, critical assessment, project implementation, and program evaluation in context. Systems that receive particular attention in this pathway include international aid organizations and globally-focused foundations. The ultimate goal of the pathway is to equip students with the skills and rooted in values of self-awareness, community centeredness, consultation, and accountability to self and others needed to engage effectively across varying cultural contexts and levels of practice—direct practice, grass roots organizing, program management, cross-sector collaboration, and/or policy analysis and advocacy. 

Students can expand their global learning opportunities by also applying to the following programs: 

2) Participate in Study Abroad experiences independent of the Global Health pathway 

3) Apply to the Kiphart Scholars Program 

 

Explore Exciting Career Possibilities
 
Biostatistician 
Community Health Worker
Emergency Relief Work
Global Health Educator
Humanitarian
Policy Analyst 
Social/Community Services Manager

 

Your Journey, Your Way, Flexibility Redefined.

Students will have the opportunity to choose one Program Pathway Option and unleash the power of flexibility. Each pathway focuses on integrated systems that are unique to each pathway and designed to train students to work across levels of practice- with individuals, organizations, communities, and government. 

Students can customize their journey by perhaps choosing to focus on one level of practice. For instance- If they want to develop more depth in clinical experience, they can gain clinical therapeutic practice skills, or if a student is more interested in community organizing, they can focus their level of practice courses on community organizing and development courses.  Your pathway journey will have unrivaled flexibility and a rich mix of variety—because transformative education is about strategic choices, paving the way for impactful professional growth.

 

Program Pathway Curriculum Map

Map your Full-Time Path

 

Map your Part-Time Path