Panel celebrates
11/05/2019

Social work panel speaks at forum.
Social work panel celebrates their profession at 小优传媒
Established as a program in 1944, nearly 700 Bluffton alumni have graduated with a social work degree. To celebrate the 75th anniversary of the major on campus, 小优传媒 faculty, students and alumni are coming together for a series of events to highlight the career field including an Oct. 29 Forum.
鈥淚 think people often have an idea of what they want to do in the future, but they don鈥檛 realize social work is the route to do that,鈥 said Megan (Hargraves 鈥10) Gonyer, instructor of teaching in social work and field coordinator at The University of Findlay. 鈥淚 found social work in my first semester at Bluffton. Before that, I didn鈥檛 know what it was.鈥
Gonyer returned to campus as part of a panel of Bluffton social work graduates to raise awareness about the field. The presentation, titled 鈥淚n the Field: Helping Others Live Their Best Lives Through Social Work,鈥 also included panelists Shae Golden 鈥18, mental health counselor at Family Resource Center of Northwest Ohio, Inc., and Jake Stabler 鈥13, medication assisted treatment navigator at Mercy Health St. Rita鈥檚 Medical Center. Heidi Mercer, assistant professor of social work, moderated the panel.
鈥淭he social work profession is like a jack of all trades. Maybe students are interested in education or they鈥檙e majoring in communication. They want to help people, but they鈥檙e not quite sure how,鈥 explained Mercer. 鈥淲e want them to know they can also use those skills in social work.鈥
During the presentation, students also learned about the different places social workers practice鈥攆rom schools to agencies on aging to libraries鈥攁nd how they will likely interact with social workers at some point in the future, either through their jobs or everyday life.
鈥淭here is such a diversity to the field and people encounter social workers in places you wouldn鈥檛 think of necessarily,鈥 said Stabler. 鈥淎 lot of primary care offices now have a social worker who does screenings for depression, anxiety and suicidal thoughts.鈥
鈥淥ur vet鈥檚 office has a social worker now to help families who are dealing with pet loss,鈥 added Gonyer.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a stigma that you only meet social workers if you break the law or lose custody of your kids,鈥 said Golden. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important to advocate for our profession and to help people understand what we do.鈥
The panelists also provided wisdom they鈥檝e learned in the field that is applicable to all students.
鈥淲e really do not know what others are going through on the inside, what kind of challenges they鈥檙e battling within themselves,鈥 said Stabler. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 take any extra effort to be kind to somebody, and a small act of kindness can have a major impact on somebody that鈥檚 been through a lot.鈥
The question and answer session supported Bluffton鈥檚 2019-20 Civic Engagement Theme: 鈥淟iving Our Best Lives.鈥 Throughout the year, Bluffton鈥檚 students, faculty and staff are drawing on the Civic Engagement Theme to learn about and put into practice how we live with wholeness and joy.
Field opportunities
Andrew Sluss 鈥20 a social work major from Houston, Ohio, interned at CASA of Allen and Putnam Counties.