🎧 Episode 3 — Lecture Notes
Title: What Makes a Profession a "Profession"?
Podcast: The Curiosity Space
Host: Dr. Andrew J. Fultz
✨ Episode Overview
In this deeper-dive episode, we explore the intellectual, ethical, and reflective foundations of social work. We ask a central question:
What gives social work its legitimacy — and who are we becoming as practitioners?
We trace key voices in the field — Flexner, Brill, Gambrill, Kondrat, Friedman & Allen — to locate professional identity at the intersection of:
critical thinking & humility
reflexivity & self-awareness
systems thinking & human behavior in context
We root these ideas in practice and human connection, grounding everything in the NASW Core Values and the HBSE perspective.
This episode invites you to reflect on how we know what we know, who we are in the work, and how systems shape our practice.
What makes social work a profession?Ethics as the backbone of identityCritical thinking as ethical responsibilityReflexivity beyond self-awarenessSeeing people within systems and meaning-makingPerson-in-Environment foundations📚 Authors & Concepts Covered
Flexner (1915) — legitimacy & professionalizationDaley & Pittman-Munke — re-examining Flexner in contextBrill (2001) — ethics as the organizing core of practiceGambrill (2001; 2012) — authority, humility, critical thinkingKondrat (1999) — reflexivity and the self in practiceFriedman & Allen (2011) — systems thinking & meaning-makingRichmond (1917) — Person-In-Environment originsBronfenbrenner (1979) — ecological systems foundationWhere do I rush to fix instead of understand?What assumptions do I carry into my practice?How does my identity shape the room when I enter it?How can curiosity deepen my ethical practice?Brill, C. K. (2001). Looking at the social work profession through the eye of the NASW Code of Ethics. Research on Social Work Practice, 11(2), 223–234.
Daley, M. R., & Pittman-Munke, P. (2017). Social work: A profession in search of its identity—Revisiting Flexner.
Journal of Social Work Education, 53(2), 286–293.
Friedman, B. D., & Allen, K. N. (2011). Systems theory.
In J. Brandell (Ed.), Theory & practice in clinical social work (2nd ed., pp. 3–20). Sage.
Flexner, A. (1915). Is social work a profession?
Proceedings of the National Conference of Charities and Corrections, 576–590.
Gambrill, E. (2001). Social work: An authority-based profession.
Research on Social Work Practice, 11(2), 166–175.
Gambrill, E. (2012). Critical thinking and the scientific method in social work practice.
Research on Social Work Practice, 22(4), 452–462.
Kondrat, M. E. (1999). Who is the “self” in self-awareness? Professional self-awareness from a critical theory perspective.
Social Service Review, 73(4), 451–477.
Richmond, M. (1917). Social diagnosis. Russell Sage Foundation.
Richmond, M. (1922). What is social case work? Russell Sage Foundation.
Bronfenbrenner, U. (1979). The ecology of human development. Harvard University Press.
NASW. (2021). Code of Ethics of the National Association of Social Workers. National Association of Social Workers.
Soft lo-fi underscore licensed for podcast use.
Written & narrated by Dr. Andrew J. Fultz.
Produced for the Northwestern State University MSW Program.
This work is not about arriving at certainty —
but remaining grounded, curious, and ethical as you grow into the profession.
Stay curious, stay grounded.