Spring 2026 SOWK 587 Week 05 - Collaboration in School Social Work

Slide 1
The image shows a presentation slide. Graphics of people and speech bubbles depict communication. Text reads: “Collaboration in School Social Work,” “Spring 2026 Week 05 SOWK 587,” by Jacob Campbell, Ph.D., at Heritage University.

Spring 2026 SOWK 587 Week 05 - Collaboration in School Social Work

title: Spring 2026 SOWK 587 Week 05 - Collaboration in School Social Work date: 2026-02-16 19:19:11 location: Heritage University tags:

  • Heritage University
  • MSW Program
  • SOWK 587 presentation_video: > “” description: >

Being able to effectively collaborate is a vital skill in school social work. Week five of SOWK 587 is a synchronous week, with in-person class on Saturday (02/21/26). Students will read about collaboration in their textbook (Jarolmen & Batista-Thomas, 2023) and have opportunities to engage in with other sources exploring how we work together in schools. In discussion forums, students will share real-world examples of collaboration and engage critically with the material. During class, we will build on these discussions by practicing key collaboration techniques in simulated team settings.

The agenda for class is as follows:

  • Multi-disciplinary team meetings
  • Best practices and strategies for effective collaboration
  • MTDM Role-Play Scenarios
  • Intersectionality and working with diverse team members

The Learning Objectives for the week include

  • Critically reflect on the experiences of effective collaboration to draw out common elements
  • Analyze the topic of collaboration from a number of different perspectives and focuses
  • Identify practices that are effective working in teams and strategies for implementing them
  • Assess methods to develop rapport and work with diverse team members
  • Implement a collaborative meeting using active listening, shared decision-making, and conflict resolution skills
Slide 2
The image displays a presentation slide titled 'The Plan for Week Five.' The agenda includes team meetings, collaboration strategies, role-play scenarios, and working with diverse members. Learning objectives focus on teamwork practices, developing rapport, and collaborative meetings. Text includes Jacob Campbell, Ph.D. LICSW at Heritage University, and Spring 2026 Week 05, SOWK 487.

Plan for Week Five

Agenda

  • Multi-disciplinary team meetings
  • Best practices and strategies for effective collaboration
  • MTDM Role-Play Scenarios
  • Intersectionality and working with diverse team members

Learning Objectives

  • Identify practices that are effective working in teams and strategies for implementing them
  • Assess methods to develop rapport and work with diverse team members
  • Implement a collaborative meeting using active listening, shared decision-making, and conflict resolution skills
Slide 3
Presentation slide featuring text and a large red circle. Text: 'Disciplinary Perspectives: What is a MDTM? What does multidisciplinary or interdisciplinary mean? Why is the work done in these settings potentially different than in single discipline-focused meetings? What kind of multidisciplinary meetings happen in schools?' Bottom left: 'Jacob Campbell, Ph.D. LICSW at Heritage University.' Bottom right: 'Spring 2026 Week 05 SOWK 487.'

Disciplinary Perspectives (1 of 2) What is a MDTM?

I want to provide definitions to help us discuss collaborative work.

[Whole Group Activity] Reflective Questions

  • What does multidisciplinary or interdisciplinary mean?
  • Why is the work done in these settings potentially different than in single discipline-focused meetings (e.g., just social workers)?
  • What kind of multidisciplinary meetings happen in schools?
Slide 4
Three diagrams illustrate 'Disciplinary Perspectives' as a type of progression: Multidisciplinary (separate circles), Interdisciplinary (overlapping circles), and Transdisciplinary (concentric circles). Explanatory text accompanies each diagram.

Disciplinary Perspectives (2 of 2) A Type of Progression

The terms you might find in the literature around different integrations of disciplines are multi, inter, and trans. Transdisciplinary work is a hallmark of the Ph.D. program I am participating in. Choi and Pak (2006) provide some concise definitions of what each of these is:

  • Multidisciplinary: Multidisciplinarity draws on knowledge from different disciplines but stays within their boundaries.
  • Interdisciplinary: Interdisciplinarity analyzes, synthesizes, and harmonizes links between disciplines into a coordinated and coherent whole.
  • Transdisciplinary: Transdisciplinarity integrates the natural, social, and health sciences in a humanities context and transcends their traditional boundaries.

I’m going to present you with a model for interdisciplinary work. While there are distinct definitions of these concepts in scholarship, in the practical world, terms like multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary are sometimes used interchangeably. In a school setting, these meetings are often referred to as MDTM, and they don’t engage in this higher level of thinking about collaborative processes.

Reference

Choi, B. C. K., & Pak, A. W. P. (2006). Multidisciplinarity, interdisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity in health research, services, education and policy: 1. Definitions, objectives, and evidence of effectiveness. Clinical and Investigative Medicine. Medecine Clinique Et Experimentale, 29(6), 351–364.

Slide 5
Diagram illustrating a model for 'Interdisciplinary Collaboration,' highlighting factors like interdependence and collective goals, with arrows connecting elements. Context: academic presentation slide by Jacob Campbell, Ph.D., LICSW. Terms include professional role, structural characteristics, and history of collaboration. (Bronstein, 2003) Spring 2026 Week 05 SOWK 587Jacob Campbell, Ph.D. LICSWat Heritage University

Model for Interdisciplinary Model

So, how can we conceptualize working together in teams? Bronstein (2003) provides a model for interdisciplinary collaboration. This model comes from and is helpful for us to understand what we should be thinking about when working together and in teams from different disciplines.

She describes five components of the Interdisciplinary Model that we should be considering and thinking about.

  • Interdependence: The reliance on interactions among professionals where each depends on the other to accomplish their tasks, requiring a clear understanding of roles and mutual respect.
  • Newly Created Professional Activities: Collaborative actions, programs, or structures that achieve more than what individual professionals could accomplish separately, fostering innovative service delivery.
  • Flexibility: The ability to adapt roles and responsibilities based on the needs of the collaboration, allowing professionals to respond creatively and reach productive compromises.
  • Collective Ownership of Goals: Shared responsibility for goal-setting, development, and achievement, ensuring all professionals, clients, and families are actively engaged.
  • Reflection on Process: The practice of discussing and evaluating the collaborative process to improve teamwork, address challenges, and enhance effectiveness.

We can think about some factors that influence our interdisciplinary collaboration.

  • Professional Role: A strong professional identity, respect for colleagues, and a perspective that aligns or complements other disciplines’ approaches.
  • Structural Characteristics: Organizational factors such as manageable caseloads, supportive agency culture, administrative backing, and sufficient time and space for collaboration.
  • History of Collaboration: Previous positive experiences with interdisciplinary teamwork, which foster familiarity and ease of collaboration in future settings.
  • Personal Characteristics: Traits such as trust, respect, openness, and effective communication, which facilitate strong interpersonal relationships among collaborators.

Bronstein, L. R. (2003). A model for interdisciplinary collaboration. Social Work, 48(3), 297-306. https://doi.org/10.1093/sw/48.3.297

Slide 6
A slide shows an A-Z list in light gray, with 'What are the skills we need to be effective collaborators?' in bold black. Bottom text: Jacob Campbell, Ph.D., LCSW, Heritage University, Spring 2026 Week 05, SOWK 487.

A-Z Skills Needed for Collaboration

We need many best practices and skills to be effective collaborators.

[Small Group Activity] Working in groups of 3 or 4. Use the form to come up with an example for each letter. Creativity is encouraged. Have groups call out when they are done, like a race. The following is the prompt:

What are the Skills We Need to Be Effective Collaborators

Go through each letter and hear what other groups used.

Slide 7
Title text asks, 'How do we develop rapport with.' A blue shape lists 'Students, Parents, Teachers, School staff, Community workers.' Footer has names and 'Heritage University,' 'Spring 2026 Week 05,' 'SOWK 487.'

Building Connection and Work

One crucial tool that is vital as a part of being able to collaborate is rapport

[Small Group Activity] Small Group Discussion

How do we develop rapport with…

  • Students
  • Parents
  • Teachers
  • School staff
  • Community workers

[Whole Group Activity] Share back with the group

  • What are some of the things you came up with?
  • What are some particularly helpful strategies for building rapport with team members with diverse needs, beliefs, experiences, identifying factors, etc?
Slide 8
Slide titled 'Obstacles to Teamwork: What Makes it Not Work' lists issues: Interpersonal and Communication Difficulties, Structural and Organizational Barriers, Commitment and Leadership Issues, Power and Role-Related Challenges. Authored by Jacob Campbell, Ph.D., LICSW.

Obstacles to Teamwork: What Makes it Not Work

Bronstein later wrote with her colleague Abramson in 2017 a chapter about group processes and dynamics in interdisciplinary teamwork. They compile many common problems that get in the way of teams working collaboratively.

Interpersonal and Communication Difficulties

  • Lack of shared professional language and technologies
  • Personality conflicts among team members
  • Lack of experience or training in teamwork

Commitment and Leadership Issues

  • Divided or conflicted commitment between the team and individual affiliations
  • Unclear or unskilled team leadership
  • Difficulties resolving conflict

Structural and Organizational Barriers

  • Inadequate organizational/administrative support and resources
  • Limited physical space for team meetings
  • Time constraints

Power and Role-Related Challenges

  • Continued dominance of higher-status professionals
  • Role competition or “turf” issues
  • Excessive role blurring or lack of role clarity
  • Differential professional socialization processes
  • Emphasis on autonomy rather than teamwork in professional education

[Small Group Activity] Combine your groups from the A-Z activity (e.g., now groups of 6-8 members). Reflect on how your proposed skills and practices impact these obstacles.

==The categories are not from the source and are my grouping.==

Reference

Bronstein, L. R., & Abramson, J. S. (2017). Chapter 27 - Group process dynamics and skills in interdisciplinary teamwork. In C. D. Garvin, L. M. Gutierrez, & M. J. Galinsky (Eds.), Handbook of Social Work with Groups (pp. 491-509). The Guilford Press.

Slide 9
**Object**: Presentation slide**Action**: Lists role-play scenarios **Context**: Educational setting---**Text**: - **Title**: MTDM Role-Play Scenarios- **Instructions**:   - Read the scenario and discuss roles.  - Stay in character.  - Debrief when switching scenarios.  - Collaboration for consensus.- **Scenarios**:  1. Behavior-Focused Conference – Addressing Chronic Disruptive Behavior  2. Tier 1 Team Meeting – Addressing Classroom Disruptions  3. IEP Meeting Follow-Up – Reviewing Accommodations & Progress  4. Threat Assessment Team Meeting – Addressing Concerns About Student Well-Being**Signature**: Jacob Campbell, Ph.D., LICSW at Heritage University**Additional Info**: - Spring 2026 Week 05- SOWK 487

MTDM Role Play Scenarios

  • Scenario 1: Behavior-Focused Conference (BFC) - Addressing Chronic Disruptive Behavior
  • Scenario 2: Tier 1 Team Meeting – Addressing Classroom Disruptions
  • Scenario 3: IEP Meeting Follow-Up - Reviewing Accommodations & Progress
  • Scenario 4: Threat Assessment Team Meeting - Addressing Concerns About Student Well-Being

  • [] Print copies of MTDM Role-Play Scenarios Bring 6 copies of week-05-handout-collaboration-role-play-scenarios.pdf

[Small Group Activity] MTDM Role Play Scenarios (About 15 Minutes Per Scenario)

Working in groups of five or six, you will role-play various scenarios. We will set a timer and for the experience and give you an opportunity to swap scenarios and change roles.

  • Read the scenario and discuss who is going to do what
  • Try to follow the situation, and stay in character assigned by your role.
  • When it is time to switch scenarios, spend a couple of minutes debriefing
  • As a facilitator and social worker be working to collaborate effectively and bring the group to consensus.

[Whole Group Activity] Debrief Experience

  • How was it to lead a team meeting or be a part of it. Did it feel similar to meetings you have been in?
  • What were things you were trying to do as a facilitator and how did that go?
  • I developed this activity using ChatGPT. Thoughts or reflections about that?

About:

These scenarios were adapted from a collaborative process with OpenAI’s (2025). Prompts were focused on developing scenarios, providing explanations problem summaries, identifying roles and team members, and potential agendas. I reviewed the outputs and changed parts that did not fit as well, removing extraneous information, and requesting adaptions based on experiences.

Reference

OpenAI. (2025, February 21). ChatGPT-4-turbo (June 2024 version) [Large language model]. https://chat.openai.com/chat

Slide 10
A silhouetted person stands next to text about diverse teams. The slide discusses the importance of diverse perspectives and challenges, including cultural backgrounds and communication styles. Questions focus on ensuring all voices are valued and promoting inclusivity in schools. Title: 'Intersectionality & working w/ diverse team members.' Text mentions: Jacob Campbell, Ph.D., Heritage University, SOWK 487, Spring 2026, Week 05.

Intersectionality and working with diverse team members

We have talked about intersectionality in seminar, and in Miguel’s class last semester. I want to spend some time framing it for school

[Small Group Activity] Small Group Discussion

  • How can diverse perspectives strengthen a team’s ability to support students?
  • What challenges can arise when team members have different cultural backgrounds or communication styles?
  • How can school teams ensure all voices are valued, especially those from marginalized groups?
  • How can social workers promote inclusive policies in schools?
Slide 11
**Object**: Slide presentation**Action**: Describing components and objectives**Context**: Educational assignment on ethical decision-making in social work**Text**:- **Title**: Ethical Decision-Making Video Presentation- **Purpose**: Applying an ethical decision-making framework in a school social work setting.- **Components**:  - 10–15-minute video presentation  - Setting Background Information  - Client Case Review (including evidence-based practices and special education services)  - Ethical Dilemma  - Ethical Decision-Making Framework and Application- **Additional Information**:   - Jacob Campbell, Ph.D. LICSW at Heritage University  - Spring 2026, Week 05, SOWK 487

Assignment 02: Ethical Decision-Making Video Presentation

Meta: Points 75 pts (14% of final grade); Deadline Monday 03/02/26 at 8:00 AM; Completion via a forum post on MyHeritage; Locations MyHeritage Assignment Detail, Syllabus Handout with Description and Rubric, and W-07 Discussion Forum and Ethical Decision-Making Video Presentations.

Purpose: The purpose of this assignment is to provide students with an opportunity to apply an ethical decision-making framework to a school social work setting. Students will demonstrate skills in analyzing client needs, identifying ethical dilemmas, and making informed decisions in accordance with professional and legal guidelines.

Task: Students are encouraged to select a youth on their caseload that they have worked with if they are engaged in a school-based placement, but they may also develop a fictional case if needed. They are to deliver a 10–15-minute video presentation detailing an ethical decision-making framework as it is applied to a client situation. The selected client should have intersectional needs, at a minimum, including eligibility for special education services. Presentations should include the following:

  • Setting Background Information: Provide context regarding the client’s school placement (e.g., district/school mission, population, special education setting, etc.).
  • Client Case Review: Describe an overview of the client and their needs. Every client is different, and the review of their case you provide should provide the context needed to understand their needs and the support you are offering. The case review will include some of the following: presenting problem, background information (age, gender, demographics, special considerations, supportive services, medications, person-in-environment), assessment, strengths/resiliency factors, planning/goals, intervention strategies, engagement/implementation, practice evaluation, intervention alternatives considered, termination, follow-up. The overall case review should give a comprehensive picture of your identified client. There are a couple of components that must be included:
    • Evidence-Based Practices: In reviewing the case, students will discuss interventions completed or proposed. Some of the examples that are discussed must include scientifically based practices. Provide a brief description of the intervention along with the sources.
    • Special Education: Discuss the connection your client’s case review has to special education services, policy, or laws.
  • Ethical Dilemma: Identify and describe an ethical dilemma you have encountered (or could encounter) in working with this client. Clearly outline what the dilemma is.
  • Ethical Decision-Making Framework: Describe and apply an example of an ethical framework to the ethical dilemma. Chapter six of Jarolmen and Bautista-Thomas (2023) presents several frameworks for making ethical decisions that could serve as the basis for students’ presentations. Provide the rationale for the decision made with your client.

Success: Grades for this assignment are evaluated using the Ethical Decision-Making Video Presentation Rubric. Students will follow the assignment guidelines to submit a final professional presentation that provides context about the client situation, describes their case, and relates an ethical dilemma to a decision-making framework. The discussion of the case should include evidence-based practice discussion and application to special education law or policy. A visual aid (e.g., presentation slides or a document) is not required for the presentation, but it is often helpful in clearly connecting the points discussed to the assignment expectations and terminology.

Slide 12
Object: Presentation rubric.Action: Lists evaluation criteria and descriptions.Context: Focused on ethical decision-making videos, covering context, client overview, ethical dilemmas, evidence practices, and presentation quality. Includes contact info, 'Jacob Campbell, Ph.D. LICSW,' and 'Spring 2026.'

Appendix A. Ethical Decision-Making Video Presentation Rubric

The Ethical Decision-Making Video Presentation Rubric is used for the assignment with the same name and evaluates students providing a detailed description of the context and setting of the described client, a thorough and organized review of their case describing their needs, identifying an ethical dilemma, and applying a decision-making framework to provide an appropriate rationale for social worker actions. The presentation is to be professionally completed, following strong facilitation strategies, and to include content on evidence-based practices and special education law or policies.

Description Initial Emerging Developed Highly Developed
Provide strong context and background information about the client setting The client’s context and setting are not discussed. The client’s context is briefly discussed but lacks many important details. The presentation includes a description of the school setting and the client’s context, but it lacks sufficient information. The presentation includes a detailed, well-articulated description of the school setting. The client’s context is clear and relevant to the case.
Include a descriptive overview of the client’s case The case presentation lacks structure, detail, or clarity. Limited information is provided regarding the client. The presentation describes the client’s needs but lacks the depth to understand their situation. The presentation provides an organized and thorough case discussion, demonstrating a deep understanding of the client’s needs and challenges.
Identify an ethical dilemma and apply it to a decision-making framework The ethical dilemma and the framework are not clearly defined. The ethical dilemma is defined, and a decision-making framework is provided, but the framework’s components aren’t articulated. The ethical dilemma is defined and applied within a decision-making framework, but the discussion of its application appears disconnected. There is an ethical dilemma that is clearly explained, explaining why it requires consideration. A nuanced discussion of an ethical decision-making framework clearly connects the rationale for decisions.
Special consideration applied to evidence-based practices and special educational needs Lacks discussion of evidence-based practices and special education policies. There is a discussion of either evidence-based practices or special educational needs, but not both. Evidence-based practices and special education needs are directly addressed, but they lack the necessary details, such as citations or a clear connection to policy. Demonstrates a strong understanding of evidence-based practices, providing citations for appropriately literature. Special education law or policies are directly connected to the client’s situation.
Professional presentation that is well organized and high-quality There are significant problems with the assignment expectations and the presentation facilitation. There are some significant problems with the assignment expectations, but the presentation is acceptable. There are some minor problems with the assignment expectations, but it is generally a well-done presentation. The presentation meets all assignment expectations and is clear, well-structured, professional, and engaging.