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Original Articles

Teaching Note—Is “Interdisciplinary” a Bad Word for Social Work Doctoral Programs?

Pages 379-384 | Accepted 01 Sep 2012, Published online: 04 Apr 2014

REFERENCES

  • Bronstein, L., Mizrahi, T., Korazim-Korosy, Y., & McPhee, D. (2010). Interdisciplinary collaboration in social work education in the USA, Israel and Canada: Deans’ and directors’ perspectives. International Social Work, 53, 457–473.
  • Gouldner, A. (1970). The coming crisis of Western sociology. New York, NY: Basic.
  • Hasenfeld, Y. (1980). Models of interdisciplinary programs in social work doctoral education. Journal of Social Work Education, 15, 108–115.
  • Jacobs, J. (2009). Interdisciplinary hype. Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved from http://chronicle.com/article/InterdisciplinaryHype/49191/
  • Lee, A., & Danby, S. (2011). Reshaping doctoral education: International approaches and pedagogies. London, UK: Taylor & Francis.
  • National Science Foundation. (2010). Doctorate recipients from U.S. universities 2009: Survey of earned doctorates (NSF 11-306). Arlington, VA: Author.
  • Tucker, D. (2008). Interdisciplinarity in doctoral social work education: Does it make a difference? Journal of Social Work Education, 44, 115–138.

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