Human Services
The Human Services major explores the agencies and community services that impact people's lives as students learn about the relationship between individual behavior, group behavior, and the institutions of human society. The curriculum is anchored in a liberal arts approach to education with the goal of helping students apply critical thinking skills to gain insight into the complex relationships between individual, social and societal questions. Students learn about how small groups operate, the roles of community and family, contemporary social problems, how social policy is formulated, and the impact of economics on social service issues. They are introduced to the research methods important in social service settings. Students learn intervention techniques ranging from counseling skills appropriate for individuals to the implementation of action strategies designed to change social conditions and improve human systems. Equally important, courses in the major emphasize humane and ethical practice through a curriculum designed to increase appreciation of the diversity of human experience and sensitivity to the dynamics of social oppression and the consequences of social change.
Through application of Lasell's Connected Learning philosophy, human services majors have ongoing opportunities to connect theoretical concepts discussed in the classroom with practical application gained by working directly in the field through service learning. In their first year, all students take an introductory course in human service theory and participate in at least one service-learning or social justice project. During their first one-semester internship, students work in a community agency that provides services or a therapeutic environment for its clients. A concurrent seminar provides the academic groundwork for this internship, and a required course in basic counseling skills gives students an introduction to valuable interviewing and intervention techniques. Finally, as the culminating capstone experience in their senior year, students are engaged in a two-semester, intensive internship placement, also accompanied by concurrent seminars each semester. Through their internship experiences and their academic course work, students develop and practice professional skills and master the writing styles for the discipline and the profession.
Skills emphasized in the major are essential to the support of individuals in a wide variety of social service or therapeutic settings in community development, volunteer management, advocacy, fund raising, small group facilitation, child welfare settings, and human service agencies in positions such as a counselor, case manager, test administrator, or rehabilitation worker. The undergraduate human services major prepares the capable student for graduate programs in areas such as social work, counseling or human services management.
By planning early in consultation with an academic advisor, students may be able to reduce the time it takes to complete a bachelor’s degree in Human Services to 3 or 3½ years.
Academic Standards for Human Services Majors
- Students must earn a grade of C or above in each of the following courses:
PSYC 101 Psychological Perspectives
SOC101 Sociological Imagination
HS101 Human Services: Systems & Skills
HS210 Case Management and Counseling
SOC331 Research methods in the Social Sciences OR
PSYC331 Experimental Design in Psychology - Students must receive a grade of C-minus or above in any required Psychology, Sociology, or Human Services course (course with one of these three prefixes) or any course which serves as a substitute or alternative for such a requirement).
- The foundation seminar and internship courses (HS215 and HS217) are taken as a unit, and failure to receive at least a C in either of these courses will require the student to repeat both.
- The senior level internship courses (HS415 and HS417) and seminar courses (HS425 and 427) form yearlong courses. Failure to receive a minimum grade of C in any one of these courses will result in the student having to repeat the entire sequence, unless there are extenuating circumstances.
The following goals and associated learning outcomes delineate what we strive for students to achieve when they complete the major program of study in Human Services:
Goal 1: Knowledge in the Discipline
Upon completion of the major program of study in Human Services, students will be able to:
- Describe key concepts and theories within the fields of Human Services, Psychology, Sociology, and Economics
- Use social science theories to explain human behavior on individual, small group, and societal levels
- Demonstrate knowledge of professional codes of ethics
Goal 2: Professional social service experience
Upon completion of the major program of study in Human Services, students will be able to:
- Demonstrate effective skills for interacting with clients
- Reflect on the development and practice of their professional roles
Goal 3: Service learning and social justice
Upon completion of the major program of study in Human Services, students will be able to:
- Engage in action to address the issues of justice by raising awareness or advocating for change
- Reflect on the results of service
- Recognize and describe social injustice
- Analyze issues that cause social and economic disparities
Goal 4: Scientific reasoning
Upon completion of the major program of study in Human Services, students will be able to:
- Demonstrate facility with research methodology
- Demonstrate ability to apply statistics
- Develop a substantiated argument
Goal 5: Communication within the discipline
Upon completion of the major program of study in Human Services, students will be able to:
- Demonstrate proficiency in professional writing
- Write a preliminary grant
- Deliver a professional presentation
Course Code | Course Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
Core Courses | ||
HS101 | Human Services: Systems & Skills | 3 |
HS210 | Case Management & Counseling | 3 |
HS215 | Foundation Internship | 3 |
HS217 | Foundations of Ethical Fieldwork | 3 |
HS415 | Advanced Internship I | 3 |
HS417 | Field Intervention Strategies | 3 |
HS425 | Advanced Internship II | 3 |
HS427 | Systems & Organizational Change | 3 |
MATH208 | Statistics | 3 |
PSYC101 | Psychological Perspectives (KP) | 3 |
PSYC218 | Dynamics of Small Groups | 3 |
PSYC318 | Abnormal Psychology | 3 |
SOC101 | Sociological Imagination (KP) | 3 |
SOC214 | Family Diversity | 3 |
SOC221 | Contemporary Social Problems | 3 |
Choose 1 from the following: | ||
ECON101 | Principles of Econ-Micro | 3 |
ECON103 | Economics of Social Issues | 3 |
Choose 1 from the following: | ||
PSYC331 | Experimental Design in Psychology | 4 |
SOC331 | Research Methods in the Social Sciences | 4 |
Choose 1 from the following: | ||
POLS320 | Policy Making & the Political Process | 3 |
SOC335 | Social Policy | 3 |
Choose 1 from the following: | ||
PSYC202 | Psychology of Personality | 3 |
PSYC220 | Social Psychology | 3 |
Choose 1 from the following: | ||
PSYC111 | Generations in America | 3 |
PSYC221 | Child Development | 3 |
PSYC223 | Adolescent Psychology | 3 |
Choose 1 from the following: | ||
CJ323 | Justice, Class, Race & Gender | 3 |
PSYC216X | Leadership in Diversity & Inclusion | 3 |
PSYC316 | Psychology of Diversity | 3 |
SOC301 | Race & Ethnic Relations | 3 |
Additional Courses
Foreign Language: 0-12 credits - The Foreign Language Proficiency requirement is detailed in the Academic Information section.
Major Requirements: 64-76 credits
Core Curriculum Requirements: 24-30 credits
Unrestricted Electives: 14-32 credits
Minimum credits required for graduation: 120
Courses listed below fulfill Knowledge Perspective requirements:
Individuals & Society
SOC 101 Sociological Imagination
MATH 208 fulfills the quantitative literacy requirement of the Core Curriculum for Human Services.
HUM103 - Invitation to the Humanities
This course invites students to consider what it means to be human from manifold scholarly perspectives. As such, students are introduced to the many disciplines included in the humanities. Arguably, there are eight: art, communication, history, language, literature, music, philosophy, and religion. Taking a thoroughly interdisciplinary approach, this course investigates how humanists employ these varied disciplines in studying and expressing humanness.
HUM203X - The New Testament
The Christian New Testament is one of the most widely read documents in the world, and one of the most widely misunderstood. In this course, we will read the New Testament and study it from several critical perspectives. This is not a “Bible study” reading of the New Testament; come prepared to have your assumptions challenged and your standard interpretations questioned. Historical criticism, source criticism, feminist criticism, and close textual analysis will contribute to a lively and refreshing look at this classic of Western literature. Critical thinking and an open mind are prerequisites to a successful learning experience. Prerequisite: ENG102
HUM204X - Africa
This course will offer a brief history of sub-Saharan Africa, an overview of East African history and culture, and a deeper examination of the culture, history, and politics of Uganda. Required of students going on the Uganda service learning trip, this course is also open to students who are interested in African history and cultural studies. Readings, films, speakers, and perhaps even a sampling of Ugandan cuisine will introduce us to this fascinating continent and country
HUM207X - Mexico/U.S.: Poverty & Human Rights
In this course, we will study poverty from the perspective of poor people themselves. Examining the diverse cultures and peoples of Mexico, we consider the way in which people in one Mexican state help themselves. Their history and struggles will shed light on the dire poverty in which half the world’s population lives, as we work shoulder to shoulder with a farming community taking its future into its own hands. The course includes an immersion component in January, involving daily service and study in Mexico through the international nonprofit Niños de Veracruz. The course also includes fifteen hours of service to Niños de Veracruz in November. This course fulfills the Area of Inquiry – Multicultural [AI(MC)] and the Area of Inquiry – Moral/Ethical [AI(ME)] and supports the Human Rights Minor.
HUM399 - Humanities Internship Seminar
This seminar helps students to develop objectives and identify potential sites for the senior internship. Topics include the application of humanities course work to a professional career and the development of skills necessary to locate an internship. The final goal of this course is to locate an appropriate internship. Junior or senior standing is required; this course is designed for Humanities Department majors only.
HUM400 - Humanities Field Experience
This course provides individually arranged participation in a work setting related to students' majors. Students spend 150 hours at the internship site over the course of the semester. Primary responsibility rests with students in identifying and pursuing an area of interest in consultation with the instructor. Students participate in a one-hour seminar each week that focuses on reflective activities that enhance the internship experience. Students complete written exercises about and evaluations of the experience. Evaluation of the field experience is based on student performance as reviewed by the employer and instructor at the internship site, as well as participation in the seminar and written assignments. Prerequisites: Junior or senior standing, approval of instructor, HUM 399. Humanities Department majors only.
HUM419 - Seminar in Hum: Readings & Research
This capstone course serves as the direct complement to HUM420. Whereas HUM420 is a writing-intensive course, this course is research and reading intensive; students work in a tutorial fashion (i.e., one on one) with the instructor to choose a research topic, read closely in pertinent sources, and report back through informative and exploratory writing assignments and conversations. Like HUM420, this course focuses on the acquisition of knowledge and the solution of problems; when taken together, these courses serve as a capstone experience. Prerequisite: senior standing. Humanities Department and IDS majors only.
HUM420 - Seminar in Humanities
This capstone course focuses on the acquisition of knowledge and problem solving. The topic will change; however, the course emphasizes extensive research projects related to students' fields of interest. This is a writing-intensive course. Prerequisites: HUM419 and senior standing. Humanities Department and IDS majors only.
Stephanie Athey
Professor of Cultural Studies, Director of the Honors Program
Office: Winslow
Email: sathey@lasell.edu
Dennis Frey Jr
Dean of Curricular Integration, Director of Rosemary B Fuss Teaching and Learning Center, Professor of History
Office: Winslow
Email: dfrey@lasell.edu
Jose Guzman
Professor of Humanities, Coordinator of World Language Program
Office: Winslow
Email: JoGuzman@lasell.edu
Lizbeth Piel
Chair of Humanities; Associate Professor of Humanities
Office: Winslow
Email: lpiel@lasell.edu
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