Thursday, April 19, 2007

Interview with Dr. Edward Sites: Women in Social Work

In today’s podcast, I talk with Dr. Edward Sites about women in social work. Dr. Sites gives us a historical perspective of the role of women who were born at or before 1900 in the development of social work as a profession in the United States.

Dr. Edward Sites, Ph.D., ACSW, LCSW, BCD, has devoted his entire career of nearly 50 years to child welfare practice, education and research, the last 41 years of which have been as a faculty member at the University of Pittsburgh School of Social Work where Dr. Sites was a full professor from 1978 until his retirement in 2006. He is the longest serving School of Social Work faculty member in the School’s 70 year history. At his retirement, he was the principal investigator of 9 projects and programs with total annual budgets of over $30 million and a state-wide staff of nearly 100 faculty and professional staff. These projects included research, degree and training programs in collaboration with 16 universities, and provided over 35,000 days of training annually to 4,000 public child welfare employees and 9,000 foster parents in all of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties as well as baccalaureate and master’s degree programs for hundreds of child welfare workers annually. Dr. Sites has received a number of prestigious awards including NASW Social Worker of the Year in Pennsylvania (1996); the Bertha Paulssen Medal (2001); the Chancellor’s Distinguished Public Service Award from the University of Pittsburgh (2003), and the Distinguished Alumni Award from the School of Social Work at the University of Pittsburgh (2004).


Download MP3 [49:24]

Recent publications

  • Cahalane, Helen and Sites, Edward W. (2008). The climate of child welfare employee retention. Child Welfare, 87, 91-114
  • Friedman, M.S., Koeske, G.F., Silvestre, A.J. Korr, W. S, and Sites, E. W. (2006). The impact of gender-role nonconforming behavior, bullying and social support on suicidality among gay male youth. Journal of Adolescent Health, 28(5), 621-623.
  • Sites, Edward W. (2005). Child Welfare in the 21st Century: A Commentary. Journal of Children and Poverty, 11(2), pp. 169-175.
  • Newhill, Christina E. and Sites, Edward W. (2005). Identifying Human Remains Following an Air Disaster: The Role of Social Work. In Turner, Francis J. (Editor) Social Work Diagnosis in Contemporary Practice. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Sites, Edward W. (2001). Paulssen Power. Seminary Ridge Review, 3(2), 31-37.
  • Newhill, Christina E. and Sites, Edward W. (2000). Identifying Human Remains Following an Air Disaster: The Role of Social Work. Social Work in Health Care, 31(4), 85-105. 

References

  • National Conference of Charities and Correction. (1910 - 1914). Proceedings of the National Conference of Charities and Correction. (Alexander Johnson, Editor). Fort Wayne: The Archer Printing Company.
  • National Conference of Charities and Correction. (1935). Proceedings of the National Conference of Social Work: Index 1874-1933. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • National Association of Social Workers. (1995). Encyclopedia of Social Work, Vol. 3. (R. L. Edwards, Editor) Washington: NASW Press.


APA (5th edition) reference for this podcast:

Singer, J. B. (Host). (2007, April 19). Interview with Dr. Edward Sites: Women in social work [Episode 16]. Social Work Podcast. Podcast retrieved Month Day, Year, from http://socialworkpodcast.com/2007/04/interview-with-dr-edward-sites-women-in.html

5 comments:

MJL said...

Jonathan,

Just want to thank you for your hard work. I'm a graduate student in clinical Psychology and your podcasts are highly informative. I listen when I'm driving or walking and I take a lot from them. Keep up the great work!

Matt
mlebo49@yahoo.com

Jonathan B. Singer, Ph.D., LCSW said...

Matt,

Your comment means the world to me. Thanks for taking the time to let me know.

Best,

Jonathan

Todd Stanfield said...

Johnathan,

Excellent podcast. I just made a blog post about it over at my website. http://toddstanfield.com/the-social-work-podcast-very-good-use-of-your-time.htm

Peter @ Enviroman said...

Hi Jonathan,

Thanks for leaving a comment in my post Uploading and manipulating pictures in New Blogger Part 2. I have responded to your comment.

BTW there may be one more tip that you may be interested in: Improving link popularity and PageRank by removing the NOFOLLOW attribute for comments. This will especially be useful if you, like me, often link to your own pages in respond to comments. If you let it known to your visitors, you may also encourage more people to comment.

Peter (Blog*Star 2006 and 2007)
Testing Blogger Beta (now New Blogger)

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