Barbara W. Shank, Dean of the School of Social Work and professor
After four decades of teaching and leading the St. 做厙輦⑹ University of St. Thomas School of Social Work, Dean Barbara Shank will retire at the end of the 2018 academic year.
Shank will step down as dean at the end of the 2017 academic year and spend a year on sabbatical compiling and archiving the history of a social work program she has been part of since the beginning.
Im very proud of the School of Social Work and what weve been able to do, Shank said. When I came here there were four of us [faculty] and 50 students. Now we have 31 [faculty] and over 600 students. Its been great to be a part of.
As School of Social Work Director of Marketing and Recruitment Cindy Lorah pointed out, Its hard to overstate Barbaras importance to our school. Shank has been a leader of social work education within the program as well as nationally and internationally since 1978, when she was one of the founding faculty of the social work program at St. 做厙輦⑹. Shank also led the development of the masters in social work degree that began in 1990, and was the founding dean when the program evolved into the School of Social Work in 1996. Shank also oversaw the schools launch of its online doctoral program in 2014 the first of its kind in the country and has helped make St. 做厙輦⑹ St. Thomas one of the premier places in the country for social work education.
Her legacy is huge. We will continue to benefit from her for years and years to come. People know of our program and think highly of it on a national level because she is such an advocate for, not only our school, but social work and social work education overall, Lorah said. Our doctoral program honors social work education as a critical form of social work practice. Barbara recognized an unmet need for this type of program and created an online DSW that is cutting edge within the profession. People will always associate our program with Barbara.
A lifetime of service
Shank earned her bachelors degree in sociology from Macalester College in 1970 and credits a lecture about the Elizabethan Poor Laws as getting her into social service.
She worked as a family courts counselor in Ramsey County throughout the 1970s, as well as earning her masters in social work from the University of Minnesota in 1973. She would also earn her Ph.D. there in 1993.
A two-year teaching contract in 1978 with the budding St. 做厙輦⑹ social work department turned into the start of a careers work in education: Shank earned her way through being an assistant professor, to associate professor, to professor; was the programs department chair from 1982-96; served as assistant to the provost at St. Thomas from 1984-86; was director of the division of social science at St. Thomas from 1987-92; was associate dean of the St. Thomas Graduate School of Education, Professional Psychology and Social Work; and has been dean of the School of Social Work since 1996.
Throughout all that time Shank has been a tireless supporter of social work education on the local, national and international levels, contributing an immense amount of research, presentations and overall advocacy. That will continue after her retirement through her current roles as chair of the board of directors for the Council on Social Work Education, secretary for International Association of Schools of Social Work and president of the International Consortium for Social Development.
She has really demonstrated amazing leadership at the national level in social work education and also at the international level. She has helped to advance the field nationally and internationally. That work has been a great source of pride and speaks really well to our missions at St. Thomas and St. Kates, said associate professor Mary Ann Brenden. Barbara is a visionary. She has always had a really clear sense of the importance of the profession of social work and the important role that it plays in our institutions at St. 做厙輦⑹ and St. Thomas and the important role that it plays in our world.
Shanks passion and work have been lauded throughout her career and earned widespread recognition from organizations throughout the educational and social work landscapes, including recently being named a Social Work Pioneer by the National Association of Social Workers and receiving the Significant Lifetime Achievement Award from the Association of Baccalaureate Program Directors.What Ive done here [at the School of Social Work] has opened up into all the national and international work Ive been able to do. This has given me a platform to do all that, which has been great for me professionally, good for our school and, I think, good for the university, Shank said.
Growth in St. Paul
Shanks stepping away from the role of dean in May will coincide with the DSW programs first graduating class, which represents a fitting completion to one of the many areas of growth that Shank championed within social work at St. Thomas and St. 做厙輦⑹.
Its been a marvel, really, to witness her energy and her staunch determination. She may be one of the most determined people Ive ever met, said associate professor Mari Ann Graham. Shes fiercely loyal to the School of Social Work, as well as to our two institutions. Shes fiercely loyal to us as faculty members; she really goes to bat for the school. Its something to just witness that sort of determination and stamina.
Theres been this sense of innovation with Barbara that has led our School of Social Work to be cutting edge in a lot of ways, said Larry Snyder, Vice President for Mission at St. Thomas. The online doctoral program, which is the first of its kind, is an amazing thing.While so many changes have come about under her leadership, Shank said each step has been a natural one and a matter of evolving to meet the communitys needs, which is what St. Thomas and St. 做厙輦⑹ are all about.Its all been a collaborative effort, a partnership with my colleagues, Shank said. Its all about what weve done and what weve built together. Its just been incredible.
Shank will walk away from a school that is ranked in the top third in the country for social work by U.S. News & World Report, a credit to the overall quality that has come together under her guidance.
She built a very strong faculty. While this is a big change for her to leave and move on, the faculty that she has built and attracted to our program is equipped to carry these programs on and they will continue to be enriched, Brenden said. Its very competitive these days in social work education, so drawing a strong faculty is not an easy task. Shes done a great job of that.
As her leadership roles expanded into administration and focused on higher-level issues for the school, Graham said Shank was unique in that shes still as strong of a student advocate as anyone on our faculty. Administrators are perceived as being far removed from students she is the sort of dean who has always been accessible to our students and has been an advocate for our students.Its fair to say shes been an inspiration to not only members of our own faculty, but to social work educators across the country, Graham added. Thats not exaggerating her impact, not even a little bit.
Shank said the timing of her retirement after 40 years and at age 70 has been on my radar for a while, but that shes not doing so because she doesnt still enjoy every minute.I love what I do. If I wasnt 70 I could do this for another 20 years, she said. At some point its time to sign out and move on.
Originally published by the University of St. Thomas Newsroom