Four Tips for Passing the Social Work Exam

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Glad you found the site. By searching for help passing the social work licensing exam on the web, you're taking an important and wise step. The internet is a giant, one-stop resource for everything you need to know and do to pass and get your LCSW, LMSW, LSW (whatever you're seeking, whatever letters your state likes best). Here are a few basic pointers to help shape your studies:

1. Check your pulse. It's easy to get worked up about the licensing exam. It's big, it's expensive, it doesn't always seem relevant to social work practice. You don't literally have to check your pulse. But keep tabs on the effect that preparing for the exam is having on you. It's a whole additional stressor added in to your probably already sufficiently stress-filled day-to-day. Take care of yourself. Maybe dial up the anxiety-reducing basics--sleep, breathe, eat, exercise. Exam prep is a marathon, not a sprint. Be the slow and steady exam-passing turtle!

2. Focus on fundamentals. The social work exam is meant for beginning professionals. There's an endless amount of material that could be on the test, but a limited amount of material that will be on the test. Study smart by mastering the material you are fairly certain you'll encounter. Learn the NASW Code of Ethics--it's the underpinning of the vast majority of exam questions. Know the common diagnoses in the DSM, the essentials of human development theory--that sort of stuff. Review scope of practice, mandated reporting, and suicide assessment. The examiners are looking to make sure you'll do a reasonably professional job and keep clients safe. If you've got that down, you're very close to passing the exam.

3. Don't overstudy.  If you find yourself deep in the theoretical or diagnostic weeds as you're preparing for the exam, get out! Remember tip #2. And #1 while you're at it. Remember that some people prepare for just a day or two and pass this test. All a lot of the questions require is social work-informed common sense. Take care not to cram and clutter your mind with unnecessary detail.

4. Practice.  How do you know you've done all of the above? Practice. Take real-time, full-length practice exams to help you gauge your readiness, identify areas you need to strengthen, and generally get acquainted with the experience of a four-hour, 170-question sit. There are lots of free partial exams posted around the web. Check out blog-sponsor SWTP for complete ones. How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice. How do you pass the licensing exam? You have your answer.

There are your four tips. Use them well. Good luck and congratulations in advance.


Learning Stages: Piaget, Erikson, Kohlberg, and Fowler

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Some knowledge needed to pass the ASWB exam requires reading, rereading, talking about, understanding. Other information--thankfully--can be summarized in a chart and easily grasped that way. Here, from usefulcharts.com, are charts covering the easily-grasped type of info--details on stages from Piaget, Erikson, Kohlberg, and Fowler:
Will any/all of this show up on the social work exam? There's no saying for sure. Maybe Piaget, maybe Erikson. Less likely Kohlberg and Fowler. Depending upon how you read the ASWB outlines, all show up on any thorough could be list. Usual disclaimer: don't wear yourself out learning the details of this material. Aim to have a general understanding of the stages. All you need is "passing" knowledge to pass the exam! Good luck.

Carl Jung and the Social Work Exam

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Carl Jung looms large for many psychotherapists and their clients, captivated by Jung's ideas about dreams, archetypes, the collective unconscious, etc. He seems to loom less large for social work exam item writers, but it's not unheard of for Jung to show up on the exam. As with previous topics, knowing very little about Jung is probably--for the licening exam--knowing enough. If this material speaks to you, make note! There's plenty of reading to be done, depth to be plumbed, skill to be gained.

But first, for the exam, quick info. From Wikipedia:
C. G. Jung, was a Swiss psychiatrist and psychotherapist who founded analytical psychology. Jung proposed and developed the concepts of extraversion and introversion; archetypes, and the collective unconscious. His work has been influential in psychiatry and in the study of religion, philosophy, archeology, anthropology, literature, and related fields. He was a prolific writer, many of whose works were not published until after his death. 
The central concept of analytical psychology is individuation—the psychological process of integrating the opposites, including the conscious with the unconscious, while still maintaining their relative autonomy. Jung considered individuation to be the central process of human development. 
Jung created some of the best known psychological concepts, including the archetype, the collective unconscious, the complex, and synchronicity.
Follow the links at Wikipedia for definitions of various terms. More too from these sites:
Happy reading. Here's hoping your Jung studies don't end here! Good luck with the exam.