Human Services Delivery & Administration Field Placement Manual
Field education is a key component of the Human Services Delivery & Administration (HSDA) program at the University of North Georgia (大象传媒) and is achieved through a cooperative relationship between students, community partners, and HSDA faculty.
The HSDA field practicum curriculum is guided by the goals of the HSDA program, the standards outlined by the (CSHSE), and the needs of students. This manual is meant to serve as a resource and guide for field practicum students, community partners, and HSDA faculty. It contains an overview of field practicum education for the HSDA program, including an overview of the goals, objectives, expectations, and policies of the HSDA program and field practicum education.
Students, HSDA faculty supervisors, and the Field Coordinator work together to place students in practicum settings that make sense for the student’s learning and career objectives. Students may choose from a wide variety of existing opportunities gathered from the HSDA programs’ large network of community partners or they may work with their HSDA faculty supervisor and Field Coordinator to locate an opportunity more suited to their interests.
Field Practicum Learning Goals & Objectives
Commitment to a Diverse and Multicultural Learning Experience
Human Services field experience give students foundation in the awareness, knowledge, understanding, and skills required to carry out effective multicultural Human Services practice with populations who are culturally diverse in terms of race, ethnicity, class, sex, religion, sexual orientation, age, ability status, and national origin. Students will gain skills in recognizing cultural misunderstandings and oppressive dynamics. Each field experience’s content includes social identity group development; understanding prejudice and stereotyping and their effects on groups; recognizing difference and dominance and the nature of social oppression and exploring our personal and interpersonal connections to power, privilege, and oppression.
Human Services classes will foster a learning environment where each student can reflect critically on their beliefs and perspectives and include content on cultural diversity and social justice. Such knowledge, awareness, and skills are critical for human service professionals to possess to work in a multicultural society. Field experiences will provide a forum to examine how our multiple identities shape our beliefs, assumptions, behaviors, and life experiences. Special attention to how our multiple identities and different experiences with oppression can enhance or hinder our work with diverse populations is given.
Upon successful completion of each field experience, students will be better able to:
- Demonstrate personal dialoguing skills around issues of multiculturalism and oppression.
- Demonstrate knowledge of multiple identities and the diversity within identities.
- Understand the interconnections between forms of oppression.
- Understand dynamics of difference and dominance.
- Demonstrate skills for multicultural Human Services practice in relationship to Human Services Ethics and Values.