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Alumnae Achievement Awards
2000
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Ann Hartman ’47
Social Worker
Dean Emerita, Smith College School
of Social Work
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Ann
Hartman ’47 is visiting professor at Fordham University
School of Social Service and dean/professor emerita
of the Smith College School of Social Work. She
is a noted expert in family therapy and social
work theory and practice.
Training and Social Work
A philosophy major at Wellesley, Hartman entered the
field of social work after completing a year of postgraduate
study at the University of Chicago.
From 1950 to 1953, she was a caseworker for the Summit
County Child Welfare Board in Akron, Ohio, and in 1954,
she received her M.S.W. from the Smith College School
of Social Work.
Hartman continued her casework at the Community Service
Society in New York City and the Mid-Nassau Community
Mental Health Center in Hicksville, N.Y. From 1958 to
1966, Hartman served as executive director of the Southeast
Nassau Guidance Center. While working towards her Ph.D. at Columbia University
in the late 1960s, Hartman consulted part-time at the
Family Service Association of Nassau County and taught
social-work theory and practice at Fordham University.
Academia
Hartman received her D.S.W. in 1972 and was recruited
to the University of Michigan faculty in 1974. During
her 12-year tenure there, Hartman co-founded the Ann
Arbor Center for the Family, a training and research
center focusing on family social-work practice. She
also directed the National Child Welfare Training Center.
In 1986, Hartman left Michigan to become dean of the
School of Social Work at Smith College. The school's
program alternates intensive summer academic sessions
with periods of supervised clinical practice. It earned
a high level of recognition during Hartman's tenure,
culminating in a national top-10 ranking.
Research and Authorship
Hartman's research focuses on families and family-center
practice, child welfare, education in child welfare,
adoption, and the history of social-work theory and
ideology. She is the author or editor of five books,
including Family Centered Social Work Practice, which
is a standard text on family practice for social-work
educators.
In tribute to Hartman's contributions to social work,
the NASW published Reflection and Controversy in 1994,
a collection of her most acclaimed editorials.
Kudos
Hartman's work as a child and family advocate and teacher
has been widely recognized. She has received honorary
degrees from Tulane University and Smith College, as
well as the Significant Lifetime Achievement Award
from the Council on Social Work Education.
Other awards include Case Western University's Herman
Stein Distinguished Social Work Educator Award; the Greatest
Contribution to Social Work Education Award from the
Massachusetts Chapter of the NASW; and the Distinguished
American Social Worker Award from the University of Cincinnati.
Selected Books by Ann Hartman
Out of the Arms of Mothers
Reflection and Controversy
Working with Adoptive Families: Beyond placement
Finding Families: An ecological approach to family assessment
in adoption
For more information about the Alumnae
Achievement Awards, please contact us by email at specialprograms@alum.wellesley.edu or
call the Alumnae Association at 781-283-2331. |