History of The Sanville Institute

  SIGNIFICANT DEVELOPMENTAL MILESTONES

Pre-1974         Informal Planning Period
1974               Signing of the State Charter founding the Institute for Clinical Social Work
1975-1976       Formal Planning Year
1976-1977       Experimental Year
1977-1978       First Operational Year of the Institute
1984               Change of Name to California Institute for Clinical Social Work
1992               Admission of Marriage & Family Therapists
2004               Admission of individuals with a master’s degree in a field that leads to licensure                       as a mental health professional, sufficient practice to support clinical learning,                       and with malpractice insurance
2005               Change of name to The Sanville Institute

The Institute for Clinical Social Work was incorporated in October, 1974, by a small group of experienced practitioners with a vision of advanced professional education that would permit students to continue their practices while earning a doctoral degree.  The founders were members of the California Society for Clinical Social Work, a California professional association, which sponsored the foundation of the Institute.

Following incorporation in 1974, the founding Board of Trustees began a series of meetings to develop the philosophy and direction of the program.  After nearly a year of regular meetings, in September 1975, the trustees invited a group of highly esteemed clinical social workers from different areas of the State to participate in planning.  In March 1976, this planning group was further expanded to include prominent social work educators, administrators, consultants, and practitioners.

Committees collected and reviewed literature on existing doctoral programs in social work, on other innovative educational programs offering advanced degrees, and from the World Health Organization, which had delineated model programs in professional education.  Other committees formulated standards for selecting faculty and students and studied the requirements of the California State Department of Education, Office of Private Post-secondary Education.  These studies culminated in the establishment of a nine-month program to test the tentative format and to further develop educational philosophy, curriculum, and modus operandi.

Forty-three highly qualified students were admitted out of 46 applicants for the experimental academic year of 1976/77.  Five colloquia were established, each led by an “animateur,” a faculty member who served as facilitator.  Each colloquium was charged with the further development of an aspect of the emerging program.  The essential structure and content of the program as it exists today was created, and the program opened for new students in the fall of 1977.

In the spring of 1984, the Institute’s Board of Trustees voted to change the name of the Institute to the California Institute for Clinical Social Work in order to differentiate it from another similarly named school that was established in Chicago.  In 1992 the Institute expanded its admission policies to include marriage and family therapists who demonstrate a commitment to the principles underlying clinical social work.  In 2004, the Institute changed its admission criteria to a master’s degree in a field that leads to licensure as a mental health professional, sufficient practice to support clinical learning, and malpractice insurance.  In January 2005, a new name for the Institute was inaugurated, The Sanville Institute.

      



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