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YU News

Schools of Social Work and Psychology Plan Major Events for Alumni and Friends to Join in the Celebrations

Oct 5, 2006 -- This year marks the 50th anniversaries of two YU graduate schools: Wurzweiler School of Social Work and Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, which share a birthplace and date but have grown into distinct entities with unique contributions to their respective specializations. For information on anniversary events, click here. Wurzweiler and Ferkauf both grew out of the School of Education and Community Administration, inaugurated by Yeshiva University in 1948. The school’s founding mission was to train professionals for both Jewish education, community administration, and social research and services. But in 1957, that school was split in two, forming the School of Social Work and the School of Education. The year before, Dr. Samuel Belkin, president of Yeshiva University, invited Dr. Morton Teicher, a professor at the University of Toronto, to develop the School of Social Work at the Washington Heights campus to provide trained professionals for Jewish communal service and the greater community. Dean Teicher recruited the first faculty and shepherded the school towards accreditation in 1959. At first, it offered only group work, adding concentrations in case work and community organization later on. Wurzweiler got its present name in 1962 after a $1 million gift from the Gustav Wurzweiler Foundation. The seed of Ferkauf was a psychological clinic established by the School of Education and Community Administration in 1951. It was to develop into an important student training site and community resource, ultimately becoming the Max and Celia Parnes Family Psychological and Psychoeducational Services Clinic at Ferkauf’s home on the Resnick Campus in the Bronx. The School of Education, consisting of departments in education/school psychology and clinical psychology, was renamed the Ferkauf Graduate School of Education in recognition of an endowment by YU Trustee Eugene Ferkauf and his wife, Estelle, in 1965. But the school only took on its present epithet in 1982, when the educational segment broke away to become what is now Azrieli Graduate School of Jewish Education and Administration. Now, as both schools begin their Golden Anniversaries, they celebrate the founding ideals that have guided them as they have moved into the 21st century as major players in the training of professionals for research, practice, and instruction in social work and psychology.