Syllabus

Master of Social Work

SSWO 670 – Grief, Loss, Death, and Dying in Social Work Practice

Credits - 3

Description

An interdisciplinary course on death and dying, we will explore the death system, funerals, economic considerations of death, care of the dying and the bereaved of all ages, psychological dynamics dealing with the death, and ultimate questions in relationship to death and bereavement. The course will examine the basic principles of palliative care, bereavement and grief in all age groups, suicide and grief, issues around refugee and immigrant experience with death, various philosophical and religious understandings of death, meaning of life, ethical issues related to the care of the dying and the bereaved. We will explore the nature of grief and loss, the personal characteristics of effective practitioners, communication skills used in practice, the goals and techniques of practice with people who are grieving, approaches to helping those who are dying, and specific interventions that are helpful to bereaved clients in cases of prolonged grief, mourning a child or those whose deaths were stigmatized or unanticipated. Students will explore their own personal, cultural, and spiritual experiences, beliefs and values around death and dying.

Materials

Required texts:

Werth, J., James L. (2013;2012;). Counseling clients near the end of life: A practical guide for mental health professionals. New York: Springer Publishing Company. (ebook access through Library)

Worden, J. William (2018). Grief counseling and grief therapy: a handbook for the mental health practitioner, 5th ed. New York, NY: Springer Publishing Company (ebook access through Library)

Optional texts:

Humphrey, Keren M. (2009). Counseling strategies for loss and grief. Alexandria, VA: American Counseling Association

Neimeyer, Robert. (2016). Techniques of grief therapy: assessment and intervention. New York, NY: Routledge

Learning Objectives and Outcomes

School of Social Work Program Outcomes:

Graduates of the UNE SSWO will demonstrate knowledge, skills, and leadership in the following:

  1. Practice social inclusion to enable people, populations, and communities to fully participate in society, enhance human bonds in the context of cultural diversity and ensure improved quality of life and equitable resource distribution. EPAS Competencies 2 & 3
  2. Engage in culturally-informed relationship building, being respectful of the complexity and diversity of contexts and circumstances. EPAS Competencies 3 & 6
  3. Utilize theories of human behavior, social systems and social inclusion when offering interventions with people and their environments. EPAS Competency 8
  4. Promote ethical reflection, critical consciousness and shared decision-making based in social work values and with consideration of the broader contexts of the world in which we live. EPAS Competency 1
  5. Balance the roles of helpers, activists, and advocates through collaboration with communities to build healthy and sustainable resources. EPAS Competencies 2, 5, & 6
  6. Engage as critical consumers and producers of research as it relates to assessment, intervention and evaluation of clinical and community practices. EPAS Competencies 4, 7, 8 & 9
  7. Practice person-centered and collaborative community partnerships across diverse settings. EPAS Competency 6

COURSE OBJECTIVES

Upon completion of this course, students will:

  1. Demonstrate knowledge of palliative, end-of-life care and bereavement principles and practices and how they are influenced by differential and development factors across the life course, and also individualized according to each patient and family; Program Outcomes 1, 2, 3 EPAS 2, 8
  2. Demonstrate knowledge of how definitions of health (e.g., culture of medicine, WHO definition of health) influence approaches to palliative, end-of-life and bereavement practices as well as how they impact disparities across class and culture in gaining access to quality of life care; Program Outcomes 3 EPAS 2
  3. Apply a range of cross-disciplinary theories of grief and loss to practice with grieving clients and utilize advanced knowledge of relational and empowering theories for practice with individuals, families, and communities faced with circumstances of loss, death and grief, and with health care organizations that deliver services to this diverse population; Program Outcomes 1, 2, 3 EPAS 6, 8 
  4. Apply knowledge, skills and cultural humility with dying and grieving clients and families that are sensitive to their diverse beliefs and customs associated with death, loss, and grieving; Program Outcomes 1, 2 EPAS 2
  5. Apply knowledge of medical ethics and decision-making methods for examining ethical dilemmas that surface in end-of-life and palliative care, and with grieving clients and families; Program Outcomes 6 EPAS 1
  6. Demonstrate competent, empathic and culturally sensitive communication skills for having difficult conversations with seriously ill and dying clients and their families, and with grievers; Program Outcomes 1, 2, 5 EPAS 2
  7. Demonstrate self-reflective practice evidenced by the capacity to identify, explain, and reevaluate underlying assumptions, values and beliefs that affect work with dying and grieving client systems; Program Outcomes 4, EPAS 1
  8. Demonstrate knowledge of the value of interdisciplinary teams in palliative care and end-of-life practice including appreciation for the different and complementary knowledge, skills and values of other health caregivers; Program Outcomes 7 EPAS 1, 8

Assignments

Reflection and Art Assignment Journals

There will be two types of journals in this course.

Death & Grief Depiction Art Assignment (Weeks 1 and 8)

During Weeks 1 and 8, you will complete an art project that depicts “what death looks like.” This can be of any creative expression or form, such as an abstract or pictorial drawing, painting, poetry, collage, musical composition, video, etc, and must be your own original work, created specifically for this class. 

Potential Materials Needed Depending on Choice of Art Form: 

  • A blank sketchbook, poster board
  • Felt tip pens, colored pencils, oil pastels, crayons; clay
  • Use oil pastels if you wish to be able to blend colors on the page, smearing them with your fingers. You can also lay one color over another for a vibrant, intense effect. Felt-tip pens are good too. Chalk pastels are quick and soft in hue but get pretty messy in a notebook.
  • Depending on your selected medium, you may also choose to use a video camera and recorder, musical instrument, or any other item to help capture and showcase your artistic expression

Reflective Journal Entry: Letter-Writing (Week 5)

Therapeutic letter-writing has been proven by research to be a highly effective and cathartic means of processing and working through emotions of any kind. One particular grief therapy technique that is commonly given to clients who are presenting with grief and loss issues as a homework assignment is to write a letter to the deceased loved one. This is intended to help clients facilitate their grief, process their painful emotions, make meaning of their grief experience, communicate messages, thoughts, and feelings to the deceased that may or may not have been spoken when he/she was alive, and help with the integration of the loss. This can be a very powerful exercise and will need lots of time in therapy to process.

Written Assignments: Fictional Case Formulation and Analysis Paper, Parts 1 and 2 (Due in Week 3 and Week 7)

For the first part of this assignment, you will visit a cemetery and take a photo of a gravestone of your choice of someone who has passed about whom you do not know anything from any era. You will then write a fictional story about this deceased individual and a loved one who has sought you out to be their counselor for grief therapy. In your story, you will write background information about the deceased individual’s life as you imagine it, your fictional client’s relationship with the deceased, and the narrative/storyline leading up to the individual’s dying. You’ll also write about your client’s grief experience, utilizing insights gleaned from what you’ve learned so far in the class about the psychology of grief/loss, including but not limited to your client’s emotional reactions, meanings attributed to the loss, signs, and symptoms experienced, systemic impacts of the loss, etc. Please attach a photo of the gravestone you visited with your paper. Please include a commentary section in which you briefly share what your personal experience was like visiting the cemetery, including any insights, triggers, memories, takeaways that emerged from your visit and/or from completing this assignment. (4-5 pages in length)

For the second part of the assignment, you will select one grief therapy technique and conduct your own research using the optional textbooks or scholarly journal articles. You will describe the tenets of the selected grief therapy technique and its application in clinical treatment. Explain why this particular technique resonates with you and how you can see it being impactful. You will then provide your clinical impressions about the client’s presentation you wrote about in Part 1 using your knowledge about assessment and then demonstrate how you would apply your chosen grief therapy technique with your client via either transcript style or elaborate description of how you’d administer the strategy in a session. (6-8 pages in length)

All readings must be APA cited and included in your reference list. You may cite articles other than those chosen to discuss that reinforce or contradict your choices.

Weekly Discussions

Each week, there will be two discussion forums. For all discussions, cite the readings and multimedia in the module and additional references as required to support your initial post and responses to your peers.

Your first post must respond to the prompt.  The second and third posts should be reactions to other peers’ postings and deepen the discussion. The goal is for everyone to be actively engaged in this conversation.

Grading Policy

The School of Social Work uses the following grading system for all courses with the exception of field education courses. Students are expected to maintain a “B” (3.0) average over the course of their study. Students with less than a GPA of 3.0 will be placed on academic probation. Students must have an overall GPA of 3.0 in order to receive their Master’s Degree.

Your grade in this course will be determined by the following criteria:

Grade Breakdown

Assignment Point ValuePercent of final grade
Fictional Case Formulation and Case Analysis Papers300 points (150 pts each)30%
Discussions480 points (30 points x 2 x 8 weeks)48%
Reflective Journal: Art Journal Entries and Letter-Writing220 points (60 pts + 80 pts x 2) 22%
Total 1,000 points100%

Grade Scale

Grade Points Grade Point Average (GPA)
A 94 – 100% 4.00
A- 90 – 93% 3.75
B+ 87 – 89% 3.50
B 84 – 86% 3.00
B- 80 – 83% 2.75
C+ 77 – 79% 2.50
C 74 – 76% 2.00
C- 70 – 73% 1.75
D 64 – 69% 1.00
F 00 – 63% 0.00

Schedule

Course Dates: Wednesday, October 23 – Sunday, December 15

All assignments must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. EST on Tuesday unless otherwise noted.

Week 1: Introduction to Palliative Care and the Experience of Grief: Death, Loss, and Meaning from a Cultural Lens
Dates: Wednesday, October 23 – Tuesday, October 29

Assigned Reading

  • Text chapters and articles

Assigned Multimedia

Discussion questions

Assignments

  • Introduced – Fictional Case Formulation & Case Analysis Paper (Part 1 due Week 3 and Part 2 due Week 7);
  • Submit Death & Grief Depiction Art Assignment (Journal) – First entry is due

Week 2: Grief and Loss: Stage Theories and Models
Dates: Wednesday, October 30 – Tuesday, November 5

Assigned Reading

  • Text chapters and articles

Assigned Multimedia

Discussion questions

Assignment

  • Continue working on Part 1 of the Fictional Case Formulation and Case Analysis Paper (due in Week 3)

Week 3: Types of Losses
Dates: Wednesday, November 6 – Tuesday, November 12

Assigned Reading

  • Text chapters and articles

Assigned Multimedia

Discussion questions

Assignment

  • Submit Part 1 of the Fictional Case Formulation and Case Analysis Paper

Week 4: Communicating Difficult Information
Dates: Wednesday, November 13 – Tuesday, November 19

Assigned Reading

  • Text chapters and articles

Assigned Multimedia

Discussion questions

Assignment

  • Continue working on Part 2 of the Fictional Case Formulation and Case Analysis Paper (due in Week 7)

Week 5: Mental Illness with the Grief Experience and Pain Management at the End-of-Life
Dates: Wednesday, November 20 – Tuesday, November 26

Assigned Reading

  • Text chapters and articles

Assigned Multimedia

Discussion questions

Assignments

  • Submit your Reflective Journal Entry: Letter-Writing
  • Continue working on Part 2 of the Fictional Case Formulation and Case Analysis Paper (due in Week 7)

Week 6: Assessment and Treatment for Grief Recovery
Dates: Wednesday, November 27 – Tuesday, December 3

Assigned Reading

  • Text chapters and articles

Assigned Multimedia

Discussion questions

Assignment

  • Continue working on Part 2 of the Fictional Case Formulation and Case Analysis Paper (due in Week 7)

Week 7: Planning for the End of Life, a Time of Difficult Decisions: Ethical Challenges and Advance Directives
Dates: Wednesday, December 4 – Tuesday, December 10

Assigned Reading

  • Text chapters and articles

Assigned Multimedia

Discussion questions

Assignment

  • Submit Part 2 of the Fictional Case Formulation and Case Analysis Paper

Week 8: Grief/Loss and the Family: Caregiving, Compassion Fatigue, & Spirituality at the End of Life
Dates: Wednesday, December 11 – Sunday, December 15

REMINDER: WEEK 8 is – SHORT WEEK, which ends on Sunday.

Assigned Reading

  • Text chapters and articles

Assigned Multimedia

Discussion questions

Assignment

  • Submit Death & Grief Depiction Art Assignment (Journal) – Final entry is due

Student Resources

Accommodations

Any student who would like to request, or ask any questions regarding, academic adjustments or accommodations must contact the Student Access Center at (207) 221-4438 or pcstudentaccess@une.edu. Student Access Center staff will evaluate the student's documentation and determine eligibility of accommodation(s) through the Student Access Center registration procedure.

Policies

Participation:

Participation is measured through your discussion board postings. Postings to the discussion board must add substantively to the discussion by building upon classmates’ ideas or posing critical questions to further the discussion. For example, a posting of “I agree with what people are saying” is not sufficient. I will be monitoring participation on a weekly basis and welcome people to check in with me if you have questions regarding your participation. Keep in mind that weekly postings make up a significant percentage of the final grade. All postings must be respectful. If at any time you are concerned with a posting, please notify me immediately. Please note that you will work in small groups to reflect and respond to the discussion questions. Your Instructor will assign you to a small group at the beginning of the course. This will be the group you work in throughout the course–where small group discussion occurs. Each week you will receive up to 30 points for participation. Please refer to the Participation Rubric to see how your weekly participation will be evaluated.

The majority of your discussions require a certain quantity of posts, but this is a minimum amount. Unless otherwise noted, you should post quality responses of no more than two or three paragraphs in length of the indicated quantity in any preferred combination related to the questions. The recommended method is that you carefully read the existing posts and then think about how to build off the existing ideas by offering additional insights, alternative perspectives, or raising critical questions. As part of this process, be sure to refer back to the original discussion question in order to keep the thread focused on the required topic and address the indicated question(s).

All posts to the discussion boards should be completed by 11:59 P.M. E.T. of the last day of the module as indicated in the “Course Schedule.” Any discussions that extend beyond that date and time will not be considered a part of the grade and/or assignment, but rather optional reading. Even though you technically have until the last day of the module to post, your participation points will suffer if you do not post initially by Saturday as this negatively impacts your classmates’ ability to respond to your posts and your ability to respond to their posts. Posts that no longer relate to the identified topic should be moved to one of the on-going discussion boards such as “Ask You Instructor,” “Hallway Discussions,” or “Resources.”

 

Course Format:

Powerpoint presentations, online class discussion, and case studies case studies will be used to illustrate theory, practice approaches, research, and policy as they relate to practice with individuals, families, and professional care providers working with loss, death and grief. Course readings reflect theories and practice models across disciplines and cultures, and include fiction that illuminates the experiences and perspectives of the dying, their loved ones, and professional careers. Course content encourages curiosity, active inquiry, debate, and creative exploration.

Although the course introduces, organizes, and explains course content, students are expected to take responsibility for analysis and application of content to their learning needs. In the School of Social Work, students are viewed as adult learners. It is expected that students will take responsibility for their own learning, incorporate critical thinking skills, show professional respect to the instructor and each other, and create an online classroom atmosphere that facilitates the teaching/learning process.

Specific expectations include:

  • Online class presence
  • Preparation for each class by completing and studying assigned readings
  • Active participation in online small group class discussions
  • Direct, assertive communication of any concerns or changes affecting attendance or completion of course requirements.

Attendance Policy

Online students are required to submit a graded assignment/discussion prior to Sunday evening at 11:59 pm ET of the first week of the term. If a student does not submit a posting to the graded assignment/discussion prior to Sunday evening at 11:59 pm ET, the student will be automatically dropped from the course for non-participation. Review the full attendance policy.

Late Policy

Assignments: Late assignments will be accepted up to 3 days late; however, there is a 10% grade reduction (from the total points) for the late submission. After three days the assignment will not be accepted.

Discussion posts: If the initial post is submitted late, but still within the discussion board week, there will be a 10% grade reduction from the total discussion grade (e.g., a 3 point discussion will be reduced by 0.3 points). Any posts submitted after the end of the Discussion Board week will not be graded.

Please make every effort ahead of time to contact your instructor and your student support specialist if you are not able to meet an assignment deadline. Arrangements for extenuating circumstances may be considered by faculty.

Student Handbook Online - Policies and Procedures

The policies contained within this document apply to all students in the College of Graduate and Professional Studies. It is each student's responsibility to know the contents of this handbook.

UNE Online Student Handbook

UNE Course Withdrawal

Please contact your student support specialist if you are considering dropping or withdrawing from a course. The last day to drop for 100% tuition refund is the 2nd day of the course. Financial Aid charges may still apply. Students using Financial Aid should contact the Financial Aid Office prior to withdrawing from a course.

Academic Integrity

The University of New England values academic integrity in all aspects of the educational experience. Academic dishonesty in any form undermines this standard and devalues the original contributions of others. It is the responsibility of all members of the University community to actively uphold the integrity of the academy; failure to act, for any reason, is not acceptable. For information about plagiarism and academic misconduct, please visit UNE Plagiarism Policies.

Academic dishonesty includes, but is not limited to the following:

  1. Cheating, copying, or the offering or receiving of unauthorized assistance or information.
  2. Fabrication or falsification of data, results, or sources for papers or reports.
  3. Action which destroys or alters the work of another student.
  4. Multiple submissions of the same paper or report for assignments in more than one course without permission of each instructor.
  5. Plagiarism, the appropriation of records, research, materials, ideas, or the language of other persons or writers and the submission of them as one's own.

Charges of academic dishonesty will be reviewed by the Program Director. Penalties for students found responsible for violations may depend upon the seriousness and circumstances of the violation, the degree of premeditation involved, and/or the student’s previous record of violations.  Appeal of a decision may be made to the Dean whose decision will be final.  Student appeals will take place through the grievance process outlined in the student handbook.