The Howard University School of Social Work is among a few select
accredited social work programs in the United States to provide it's
students with on-site library
services tailored to their information needs.
The Social Work Library, established as
a formal campus branch library within the School of Social Work building in 1971 (first
constituted in 1962 as a Reading Room within Founders Library), is a component of the
Howard University Libraries System.
Our Purpose and Mission
The purpose of the Social Work
Library is to provide resources and services to
facilitate and assist students, faculty, staff, and administrators of
the
School of Social Work, our primary clientele, in teaching and
learning, research, practice, and service to the University and community. Faculty, staff,
students, and administrators in the wider
University community and
others may also find this
resource useful. Our mission is to fulfill our purpose while providing
quality customer service to our clients.
The Social Work Library's
resources and services support the School of Social Work's MSW and Ph.D.
curricula as well as faculty and student research and service. A strong
professional collection [accessed
via the
Sterling
online
library catalog] is maintained on the: history and philosophy of social
work/social welfare,
social welfare policies and services,
micro practice (direct services to
individuals, families, and groups),
macro practice (community
organization and social service management), and
social research and statistical
methods.
The collections are also developed
to support the following fields of practice/areas of specialization: Criminal Justice,
Displaced Populations (refugees,
immigrants, disaster victims, the homeless, etc.),
Family and Child Welfare,
Social Gerontology,
Social Work in Health Care Setting,
and
Social Work in Mental Health
Settings.
The Library also strives to comprehensively collect social
work/social welfare materials related to African Americans and Blacks
worldwide with a focus toward oppressed and underserved populations (e.g.,
women, persons with disabilities, gays and lesbians,
and other racial, ethnic and religious minorities).
The print and microforms collections
are augmented by an extensive collection of electronic resources through the Digital Library
and media resources -- computer diskette, CD-ROM, and free and commercial
Internet-accessible databases -- providing bibliographic access, research
data files for statistical information and/or secondary analysis, clinical
and practice management software, and full-text journals. Multi-media
resources (kits, games, audio tapes, transparencies, and videocassettes)
are housed
in the Social Work Library and in the Undergraduate Library's Media Center
(which provides individual and group audiovisual facilities).
Other research materials may be
found in the central library complex
(Founders
& Undergraduate Libraries) and other branch libraries (Architecture,
Business
and
Divinity). These libraries along with the Social Work
Library constitute the
Howard University Libraries;
they are administratively connected such that materials borrowed at any one of these
locations may be returned to any location within this system. Other autonomous resources
include the
Health
Sciences, the
Allen Mercer Daniel Law Library,
the Ralph J. Bunche Reference Library
, the African-American Studies Resource
Center, and the University's archives and world-renown collections of the
Moorland-Spingarn Research
Center (the latter two are currently housed in Founders Library).
University-wide library
resources are enhanced by the Libraries' membership in the prestigious,
national Association of Research Libraries (ARL) and the Chesapeake
Information and Research Library Alliance (CIRLA).
Our CIRLA membership entitles
Social Work students to direct borrowing privileges at Georgetown
University (Lauinger
and Bloomer Libraries), Johns Hopkins University (Eisenhower Library),
the National Agriculture Library (at Beltsville) which houses
the Food & Nutrition Service and Cooperative Extension collections,
the Smithsonian Institution Libraries (excluding Freer, Sackler, Hirshhorn and NMAA collections),
the University of Delaware Libraries, and the libraries of the University
of Maryland at College Park. Also, our Interlibrary Loan (ILL) office
located in Founders Library will assist you in acquiring photocopies of
journal articles, or borrowing books and other monographs from libraries
world wide (delivery is often within 48 hours).
The
library's web site provides an overview of the resources and services
offered by the Library. It is designed to mirror the curriculum and the
broader organization of
social work knowledge. Goal-oriented strategies for undertaking library
and information research are presented. Traditional (print, microform,
and audiovisual) and electronic (e.g., CD-ROM and Internet) social work
resources -- including related health and human services, behavioral and
social sciences, and other relevant professions and/or disciplines --
are identified, organized, and described to facilitate the research
process.
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