Conference speakers announced
“Restoring Hope: The Power of Social Work” — July 22-25,
Washington, D.C.
By Paul R. Pace, NEWS staff
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| Bob and Lee Woodruff, above, and CNN’s Donna
Brazile are among the speakers who will be at NASW’s “Restoring Hope: The Power
of Social Work” conference in July. |
What does hope mean to you?
“Hope is the reason that the field of social work exists,”
says Eric Rogers. “We believe that our efforts positively impact our world, our
nation, our communities, families and individuals for the better. Hope is the
fuel for the engine that drives change.”
Rogers has been a soldier and a social worker, and is now the
executive director of Give an Hour, a volunteer program that encourages social
workers and other mental health professionals nationwide to donate an hour of their
time each week to provide free mental health services to military personnel and
their families.
Rogers will be among the plenary speakers for the NASW
“Restoring Hope: The Power of Social Work” conference July 22-25 at Marriott
Wardman Park hotel in Washington, D.C. Registration and more information can be
found at www.professionofHOPE.org.
“This is NASW’s first national practice conference in more
than a decade,” said Elizabeth J. Clark, executive director of NASW. “Our plan
is to inspire the 1,000 attendees with new concepts about hope and resilience.
This will help not only the people we serve but also the profession.”
The gathering will focus on best practices, policies and
research findings that incorporate hope and resilience into social work
practice.
Keynote speakers include international and national
personalities who have proven the value of being optimistic about the future.
At press time, they include:
-
 |
| Donna
Brazile |
Donna Brazile, CNN political commentator, adjunct professor
at Georgetown University, author and columnist. In 2009, Brazile was chosen by
O, the Oprah Magazine, as one of its 20 remarkable visionaries for the
magazine’s first-ever “O Power List.”
- Bob Woodruff, anchor and reporter for ABC News; and Lee
Woodruff, journalist and author. The couple wrote the book, “In an Instant: A
Family’s Journey of Love and Healing,” which includes details of how they
persevered after Bob Woodruff suffered a near-fatal traumatic brain injury
while embedded with U.S. soldiers in Iraq.
Among the preliminary speakers are Roberta Greene, professor
and chairwoman of Gerontology and Social Welfare at the School of Social Work
at the University of Texas at Austin. Greene said she plans to discuss how
resilience is promoted through hope.
“It is too easy for people to see the negative in situations,
particularly if there is adversity or trauma,” Greene said. “We have to be able
to also see the positives to remain optimistic and hopeful. That reframing
applies personally and to clients.”
Give an Hour’s Rogers noted that he plans to talk about the
vital role social workers play in taking care of military families.
“Social workers represent the largest group of volunteer
clinicians in the Give an Hour network,” he said. “As we expand our mission
through the Community Blueprint Network, social workers bring critical
leadership skills to community-based initiatives. It’s an affirmation of the
value of social work and also a call to action.”
At press time, speakers for the plenary sessions include:
Opening Plenary:
Leadership and the Power of Social Work: William Pollard, president of Medgar Evers College; and Nancy
A. Humphreys, director of the Nancy A. Humphreys Institute for Political Social
Work and professor of Policy Practice at the University of Connecticut School
of Social Work.
Plenary Session I:
Building Resiliency After Trauma: S. Megan Berthold, assistant professor of Casework at the
University of Connecticut School of Social Work; Ellen Minotti, director of
Social Services of Cambodia; and Roberta Greene, professor and The Louis and
Ann Wolens Centennial Chair in Gerontology and Social Welfare at the University
of Texas at Austin School of Social Work.
Plenary Session II: New
Understandings of Grief and Implications for Practice: Ken Doka, professor of Gerontology at The College of New
Rochelle
Plenary Session III:
Hope for our Children: Terry Cross, executive director of the National Child Welfare
Association; William Bell, president and CEO of Casey Family Programs; and
Sheryl Brissett Chapman, executive director of the National Center for Children
and Families.
Plenary Session IV:
Building Hope with Honor for Military Veterans: Anthony Hassan, clinical associate professor and director at
the University of Southern California Center for Innovation and Research on
Veterans and Military Families; and Carol Sheets, national director of Social
Work at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
In addition to keynotes, panel discussions and individual
presentations, the conference will feature poster sessions, exhibitors and a
social work film festival on the evening of July 23. Entertainment will be
provided July 24 by The Capitol Steps, a music and comedy troupe that covers national
politics. Attendees will have the option of signing up for pre- and
post-conference optional workshops as well.
Poet Tony Keith, who is a student-success specialist for the
University of the District of Columbia’s Community College, will speak to attendees
on July 22. Keith teaches the power of poetry to young people around the world,
particularly first-generation, low-income, racial and ethnic minority students.
A complete overview of conference activities can be found at www.professionofHOPE.org
From March 2012 NASW News. © 2012 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
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