It’s National Professional Social Work Month 2012

Mar 14, 2012

By Paul R. Pace, NEWS Staff

It’s March. That means it is National Professional Social Work Month and social workers everywhere are encouraged to spread the message of this year’s theme, “Social Work Matters.”

U.S. Rep. Edolphus “Ed” Towns, D-N.Y., will join the more than 60 members of
Congressional Social Work Caucus on World Social Work Day, March 20, on Capitol
Hill to celebrate the caucus’ first anniversary. Towns is chairman of the
caucus, which includes all of the social workers who serve in Congress. Members
continue their efforts to educate fellow legislators and their staffs about the
issues that challenge the social work profession.

Just as members of the caucus do their part to spread the word about the
power of social work, social workers themselves need to inform their neighbors,
employers and lawmakers about their important roles in helping society.

Fortunately, the Social Work Month toolkit, available at  www.SocialWorkMonth.org, is at the
ready to help social workers reinforce their claims that social work matters.

“Even though Social Work Month is celebrated each March, we wanted to give
social workers a variety of material they can use all year long,” explained Gail
Woods Waller, communications director at NASW. “We have assembled great
information that will help social workers make the case for greater support
throughout the year.”

This year’s Social Work Month toolkit focuses on eight core areas of social
work practice: aging and family caregiving; health care navigation, child
protection and family services; adolescent and youth development; military and
veteran assistance; mental and behavioral health treatment; nonprofit management
and community development; and poverty reduction.

Each section of the toolkit offers valuable information, including talking
points, trends in social work, media coverage and research data. The kit also
includes key messages and Social Work Month proclamation and news release
templates.

“Social workers weave together the threads of society’s social safety net,”
said NASW Executive Director Elizabeth J. Clark. “As the profession of hope, we
help people overcome poverty, inequality, insecurity, fear, violence, trauma,
loss and pain. What social workers do and how we do it does matter, and there’s
no better time than Social Work Month to remind the world that human well-being
is well worth the effort.”

Other National Professional Social Work Month events include:

  • The release of the new NASW Press book, “Social Work Matters: The Power of
    Linking Practice and Policy,” edited by Elizabeth Hoffler, special assistant to
    the NASW executive director, and Clark. It includes 40 chapters written by
    experts in the field. More information can be found at www.naswpress.org.
  • Social Work Media Awards. NASW is asking for your votes for the best
    reporting and depictions of social work issues showcased by the media at  www.SocialWorkersSpeak.org
    Votes
    will be accepted through March on the best media representation of social work
    among 10 categories: websites; single topic blogs; newspaper/news;
    newspaper/columns; magazines; radio; TV/news; TV/shows (broadcast or online);
    film/commercial; and film/documentary. Winners will be announced at NASW’s
    Annual Leadership Meeting in April.
  • Clark and Hoffler will speak at the Association of Baccalaureate Program
    Directors of Schools of Social Work conference in Portland, Ore. this month.
    Their presentation will focus on the essential links between social work
    practice and policy. Also this month, Clark will present at the Institute for
    Community Living in Brooklyn, N.Y., on the role of social work in health care
    reform and at the 22nd annual National Interdisciplinary Breast Center
    Conference in Las Vegas.
  • March 26 is annual Social Work Day at the United Nations. Students,
    practitioners and educators will convene at the U.N to celebrate the efforts of
    social workers around the world. NASW President Jeane Anastas will provide
    opening remarks and help present The Global Agenda for Social Work and Social
    Development to the U.N. secretary general with Gary Bailey, IFSW president and
    past president of NASW.

The Social Work Month toolkit and more information can be found at www.SocialWorkMonth.org.

In honor of National Professional Social Work Month, National Public Radio’s popular shows “Morning Edition,” “The Diane Rehm Show” and “Wait Wait … Don’t Tell Me!” will feature short messages during March 2012 about the important role social workers play in society.

From the March 2012 NASW News

Child Abuse Prevention Month

Child Abuse Prevention Month

April Ferguson LCSW-C Senior Practice Associate Children and Adolescents April 2024 The National Association of Social Workers (NASW) acknowledges April as Child Abuse Prevention Month. The Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (CAPTA) defines child abuse and...

Salute Your Graduate with an NASW Press Book Gift

Salute Your Graduate with an NASW Press Book Gift

The NASW Code of Ethics is a set of standards that guide the professional conduct of social workers. The 2021 update includes language that addresses the importance of professional self-care. Moreover, revisions to the Cultural Competence standard provide more...

Categories