Applicants pending the completion of educational or certification/licensure requirements may be referred and tentatively selected but may not be hired until all requirements are met.
Basic Requirements:
- United States Citizenship: Non-citizens may only be appointed when it is not possible to recruit qualified citizens in accordance with VA Policy.
- Education: Have a master's degree in social work from a school of social work fully accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE). Graduates of schools of social work that are in candidacy status do not meet this requirement until the School of Social Work is fully accredited. A doctoral degree in social work may not be substituted for the master's degree in social work.
- Licensure: Persons hired or reassigned to social worker positions in the GS-0185 series in VHA must be licensed or certified by a state to independently practice social work at the master's degree level.
- English Language Proficiency: Social workers must be proficient in spoken and written English in accordance with VA Handbook 5005, Part II, chapter 3, section A, paragraph 3j, this part.
May qualify based on being covered by the Grandfathering Provision as described in the VA Qualification Standard for this occupation (only applicable to current VHA employees who are in this occupation and meet the criteria).
Grade Determinations:
Senior Social Worker, GS-12
Experience/Education. The candidate must have at least two years of experience post advanced practice clinical licensure and should be in a specialized area of social work practice of which, one year must be equivalent to the GS-11 grade level. Senior social workers have experience that demonstrates possession of advanced practice skills and judgment. Senior social workers are experts in their specialized area of practice. Senior social workers may have certification or other post-masters training from a nationally recognized professional organization or university that includes a defined curriculum/course of study and internship or equivalent supervised professional experience in a specialty.
Licensure/Certification. Senior social workers must be licensed or certified by a state at the advanced practice level which included an advanced generalist or clinical examination, unless they are grandfathered by the state in which they are licensed to practice at the advanced practice level (except for licenses issued in California, which administers its own clinical examination for advanced practice) and they must be able to provide supervision for licensure.
Demonstrated Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities. In addition to the experience above, candidates must demonstrate all of the following KSAs:
(a) Skill in a range of specialized interventions and treatment modalities used in specialty treatment programs or with special patient populations. This includes individual, group, and/or family counseling or psychotherapy and advanced level psychosocial and/or case management.
(b) Ability to incorporate complex multiple causation in differential diagnosis and treatment within approved clinical privileges or scope of practice.
(c) Knowledge in developing and implementing methods for measuring effectiveness of social work practice and services in the specialty area, utilizing outcome evaluations to improve treatment services and to design system changes.
(d) Ability to provide specialized consultation to colleagues and students on the psychosocial treatment of patients in the service delivery area, as well as role modeling effective social work practice skills.
(e) Ability to expand clinical knowledge in the social work profession, and to write policies, procedures, and/or practice guidelines pertaining to the service delivery area.
Reference: For more information on this qualification standard, please visit
https://www.va.gov/ohrm/QualificationStandards/..
Physical Requirements: The incumbent must be a mature, flexible, sensible individual capable of working effectively in stressful situations and able to shift priorities based on patient needs. The incumbent must complete annual Employee Health requirements, such as annual physical/TB screening or testing as a condition of employment.
The incumbent must be able to drive for a minimum of a four-hour period and stay mentally alert. If the driver realizes they are not mentally alert they must use good judgement in pulling over at the first safe area, road-checking vehicle with walk-around inspection, and continue driving as soon as possible. In addition to any other annual employee health requirements, the Incumbent must pass a VA Physical and adhere to all VA and DOT drug and alcohol testing and guidelines. For additional details, see VA Directive and Handbook 5019, Employee Occupational Health Services.
Work involves both sedentary office work, such as in VA office, home office if Tele-Working, as well as work in the community or in Veterans' homes, providing case management, psychotherapy, skill building, and interacting with community agencies and, family members, and providers. Typical work involves active listening, reading, observing, and evaluating verbal and nonverbal behavior, writing reports and clinical notes. The position requires the use of office equipment such as computers, keyboards, telephones, fax machines, and photocopy machines. Visual acuity, keen hearing, clear distinctive speech, and manual dexterity are required. The position involves potentially long periods of continued driving and sitting, walking, and standing, assisting & accompanying patients for community appointments with a variety of medical conditions and/or disabilities. Work requires reaching, turning, or moving hands, arms, feet, and legs to operate hand and foot controls. Associated duties may require stopping, bending, lifting, climbing, reaching, turning and securing patients, oxygen, and wheelchairs, with appropriate securing devices. The incumbent may be exposed to isolation situations or home settings that may require donning of protective clothing due to factors such as bedbugs, infected patients, and contaminated materials. The incumbent may occasionally be exposed to patients who are combative secondary to experiencing delirium, dementia, or psychiatric disorders. The Incumbent may also be exposed to patients who may be experiencing psychosis or suicidal ideation and who may require evaluation for inpatient treatment.