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  • McQueary College of Health and Human Services

Social work programs reaffirmed through 2033

February 24, 2026 by Sewly Khatun

BSW students and faculty volunteer at Ozarks Food Harvest during Hunger Action Month in fall 2025.

Missouri State University’s social work programs have been reaffirmed through 2033 by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE). 

The renewal verifies that both the Bachelor of Social Work (BSW) and the Master of Social Work (MSW) programs meet national educational standards. For students, it protects eligibility for licensure and reinforces professional credibility after graduation. 

Program structure and milestones 

The BSW program has been continuously accredited since 1977 and will mark 50 years of accredited social work education in 2027. It enrolled 134 students in spring 2026. 

Dr. Michele Brown (left) and Heather Eckhart (right).
Dr. Michele Brown (left) and Heather Eckhart (right).

The MSW program enrolled 142 students this spring and continues Missouri State’s decades of nationally recognized social work education since the 1970s. 

“During the recent review cycle, we worked with faculty and practicum leaders to align the MSW curriculum, policies and procedures with CSWE standards,” said Dr. Michele Brown, MSW program coordinator. “That work led to a virtual site visit in April 2025 and official reaffirmation in November 2025.” 

The review also included coordination of field education led by Heather Eckhart, clinical assistant professor in the MSW program. Her practicum oversight contributed to the program’s preparation throughout the review process. 

The BSW program completed a comprehensive review during the same cycle. According to Natalie Curry, BSW program coordinator, the process spanned nearly two years and focused on documenting curriculum alignment and assessment outcomes, with practicum serving as the signature pedagogy of social work education. 

Working closely with Regina Russell, clinical professor and BSW practicum coordinator, Curry helped demonstrate how the program meets accreditation requirements. The BSW program received official reaffirmation in November 2025. 

“Having our accreditation reaffirmed demonstrates the university’s longstanding commitment to high-quality social work education,” Curry said. 

Practical training from the onset 

Field education is central to both programs. The review process affirms that practicum placements meet supervision and learning expectations across sites and community settings. 

For MSW students, Brown noted that the review strengthened alignment between coursework, practicum education and workforce preparation, reinforcing graduates’ readiness for effective practice. 

Curry described accreditation as foundational for students beginning their careers. 

“Accreditation provides confidence that students are receiving an education aligned with national professional standards and preparing them for competent, ethical generalist practice,” she said. 

“Graduating from an accredited BSW program can support eligibility for advanced standing in many MSW programs. It can also help meet licensure requirements in states that recognize the bachelor’s-level social work credential.”

Natalie Curry (left) and Regina Russell (right).
Natalie Curry (left) and Regina Russell (right).

A growing impact 

Reviewers highlighted strengths reflected in students’ day-to-day experiences. MSW students described a well-rounded education that integrates theory and practice while reinforcing the cycle of practice-informed research and research-informed practice. 

In the BSW program, the site visit report described a strong sense of pride across stakeholder groups. It also noted a welcoming, inclusive learning environment where students reported feeling supported, heard and valued by their instructors. 

Both Brown and Curry see this milestone as part of an ongoing process, not an endpoint.  

Brown emphasized the importance of “continuous curriculum enhancement informed by student feedback, community needs and the evolving demands of the social work profession.” 

Curry added, “Looking ahead to the next review in 2033, a key priority is building on what we do well while remaining responsive to student feedback and the evolving needs of the profession.  

“Overall, our goals focus on continuous improvement, maintaining strong accreditation standards and supporting student success.” 

Learn more about social work programs

Filed Under: MCHHS News Tagged With: faculty, Master of Social Work, Michele Brown, Natalie Curry, School of Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences, Social Work

A new effort to ensure student success

November 14, 2024 by Ella Reuter

A female student works on her laptop.

In the last decade, some universities created online programs that offered course curricula but no student life or student affairs opportunities.

Online program students might benefit from lower fees but miss out on important aspects of college living and learning.

An interdisciplinary team of McQueary College of Health and Human Services (MCHHS) faculty members and student leaders saw the need to educate the whole learner, understood the fee/funding concern and took up the challenge.

What’s the MSSIP grant?

Thanks to a MCHHS Student Success Innovation Projects (MSSIP) grant worth about $8,000, team members launched a full-year pilot project in 2023. Called “More Than the Sum of Their Credits,” the project focused on integrating high-impact learning and social connection opportunities into two of Missouri State’s online academic programs – social work and psychology.

This project originated from the belief that the quality of education for students in online programs at Missouri State is enhanced by the traditional melding of academic affairs and student affairs.

MSSIP offers funds to implement real impact projects that improve undergraduate student success. Multi-year funding is available for up to four years and a maximum of $100,000.

“It allows teams to launch projects fast. We were able to pivot quickly from ‘someday we should’ to ‘let’s get started,’” said project leader Dr. Tim Daugherty. He is a psychology professor in the School of Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences at Missouri State.

The other faculty members involved include:

  • Natalie Curry, clinical associate professor and coordinator of the Bachelor of Social Work program in the School of Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences
  • Dr. Paul Deal, associate professor in the School of Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences
  • Dr. Leslie Echols, associate professor in the School of Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences
  • Dr. Dana Paliliunas, former faculty member
  • Dr. Tanya Whipple, senior instructor in the School of Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences
  • Dr. David Zimmerman, associate professor and undergraduate coordinator of the forensic child psychology certificate program in the School of Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences

More about the project

Through the university’s Learning Management System, the team experimented with delivering weekly club meetings, monthly events and plenty of accessible content. The content included links to career-related sites, news articles, videos to facilitate students’ understanding of their major curriculum and interviews with faculty members via Zimmerman’s “ZimTube.”

A year after the project began, Daugherty notes the team has been able to leverage lessons learned to continue offering the most effective project elements without additional funding.

Successful outcomes

“The team succeeded in reimagining high-impact practices to make them accessible and meaningful for online-program students,” Daugherty said.

The data the team collected and reflected on from this project resulted in a peer-reviewed scholarly paper that will soon be published in the Journal of College Orientation, Transition and Retention. This paper features a student co-author who worked closely with the team.

In addition, two online-program students seized the opportunity to collaborate with faculty members on clinical research during the pilot period. That opportunity was a first for the online program, and the successful students co-authored a paper presented at the APS (Association for Psychological Science) Global Psychological Science Summit in October.

“Working together, we can do great things,” Curry said. “We’re grateful that MSSIP funds helped launch these efforts.”

The team is available to consult with and support the efforts of teams in other programs wanting to take the next step.

Find out more about the MSSIP grant

Filed Under: MCHHS News Tagged With: Dr. Tim Daugherty, Natalie Curry, Psychology, research, School of Mental Health and Behavioral Sciences, Social Work, students

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