Connecting theory, practice and generations with Scott Wilkes

Scott Wilkes speaking into a microphone at a roundtable event

A formative experience in field education

Scott Wilkes called his field director from a phone booth on Broadway Avenue in uptown New York, not far from the Columbia University campus where he was getting his MSW. He was struggling in his field placement at Misericordia Hospital in the Bronx. 鈥淢y field instructor was Cheryl Ascendio. She was the director of field education, and she was a powerhouse and intimidated the crap out of me. I was scared to death of her,鈥 he recalls.

Wilkes had called her from that payphone to try to talk his way out of his field placement. 鈥淎nd her level of compassion in that phone call was a side that I had never seen before, and how encouraging she was, and how empathetic she was! 鈥 She was able to figure out what I needed most when I needed it and to adjust and provide me that support, which then really helped shape my career.鈥

While that experience was decades ago, Wilkes remembers it in detail鈥攆rom the location of the payphone to the spelling of his instructor鈥檚 name. For him, that conversation with Ascendio not only righted his path in his internship, it also illustrates the importance of field education in social work.

鈥淭here鈥檚 something about shaping your professional identity that happens in field education. You learn who you are as a practitioner. You learn what your values are. You learn what are the skills that you need to develop and the strengths that you bring. 鈥 Who we are, ultimately, as supervisors, is [reflected in] how we were supervised and directed. There鈥檚 a connection there.鈥

There's something about shaping your professional identity that happens in field education. You learn who you are as a practitioner.

鈥 Scott Wilkes

One foot in practice, one foot in academia

After more than twenty years in program development and agency management, Wilkes decided to pursue his Ph.D. in social work, with an eye towards an academic career. His previous work had moved him to Cleveland, so he enrolled as a Ph.D. student at Case Western University鈥檚 Jack, Joseph, and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences.

While completing his degree, he started working as a faculty advisor in the field education department. 鈥淚 loved it because it gave me one foot in the practice realm and one foot in academia.鈥

鈥淚 was a practitioner making a transition to academia,鈥 Wilkes explained. 鈥淪o [field education] kept me connected to what was happening in real life, real practice, and how important it is for our student population to have real-world experience, which is what our students say all the time.鈥

Field education is described as the 鈥渟ignature pedagogy鈥 of social work, and Wilkes sees the importance of concurrent learning in both classroom and internship placements. 鈥淭hose two things have to happen simultaneously in order for you to really understand it.鈥

Field education helps students translate theory into practice, Wilkes says. 鈥淲e can talk about it in class all the time,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e can simulate it in ways that don鈥檛 quite get at it. But to actually do it and to see the real impact that it has on clients and families and communities鈥 I think it鈥檚 just an exciting time for students.鈥

鈥淚 also love the mentoring aspect,鈥 he continues, 鈥渢hat we have experienced, licensed practitioners who are willing to give up their time to mentor the younger generation and show them the ropes.鈥

鈥淚 love that lineage and legacy that carries through our profession,鈥 he says. Students in internships learn from their field educators and from the social workers at the placement site. 鈥淚deally, as seasoned practitioners, many years removed from their education, [those students] then come back and serve as field instructors.鈥

Varied career path

Wilkes now serves as the Assistant Dean for Academic Affairs at the Mendel School. He still teaches social policy and supervision courses, and he has developed and taught courses on legal issues in social work, as well as research. He鈥檚 also serving his second term on the Ohio Counselor, Social Worker, and Marriage & Family Therapist Board, and writes exam questions for the social work licensing exams.

鈥淓veryone鈥檚 pathway is different,鈥 he says. He tells his students 鈥渨hat you can do is just be as prepared as you can for the inevitability of the twists and turns of your career, but you can鈥檛 plan it.鈥

Remembering that call to Cheryl Ascendio, decades ago, reminds him of his social work lineage. 鈥淭hat lineage of learning from the past, and then carrying that on, you鈥檙e going to then influence the next generation,鈥 Wilkes says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e all in this never-ending stream. I think field education [connects social workers] more so than any other aspect of social work in terms of how we learn and how we become who we are.鈥


This article appeared on the in Nov. 2024.