Support the BRIDGE Student Scholarship Challenge
BRIDGE graduates who enroll in MSW programs often have difficulty financing their graduate education. We can change this.
We have committed resources to fund scholarships for BRIDGE graduates accepted to BUSSW’s MSW Program as a challenge to the BUSSW Community. By making your gift to the BRIDGE Discretionary Fund today, you can help these BRIDGE graduates reach the next step of their BU social work education.
BRIDGE is an invaluable resource for greater Boston. The success of our graduates is synonymous with the healthy growth of our city. Students admitted to BUSSW face tuition rates that can exceed their family’s annual income. Many do not qualify for federal funding and rely on grants from BU and private scholarships from generous donors. To continue our mission, help provide scholarship support for BRIDGE graduates who are accepted to BUSSW’s MSW Program. You can provide direct support to the BRIDGE Program here. If you have questions about making a gift, or other ways you can make a commitment, please contact Ray Joyce at rayjoyce@bu.edu or call (617) 353-2348.How You Can Help
Why BRIDGE?
Boston has long been a beacon for those who have historically not had access to education, including participants from around the globe. Today, that group makes up more than a quarter of the city’s population. Yet members of these communities still struggle to access vital services, including education, healthcare, and legal counsel. They urgently need skilled social workers who can speak their languages, understand their cultures, and advance their well-being.
To meet this demand—and to promote social justice, a central tenet of our mission—the Boston University School of Social Work created an innovative program to increase the number of bilingual and bicultural social workers – BRIDGE. Through strong outreach to nonprofits and community organizations, BRIDGE recruits aspiring social workers within specific populations, focusing on those who are college educated and have a passion for social service.
The Program
Our students come from more than 35 countries across the Middle East, Asia, and Central and South America, including Morocco, Cambodia, Haiti, and Peru. Many have experienced trauma stemming from civilian or military violence. Some are the children of immigrants and refugees who came to the United States and stayed under the DACA program. Typically, BRIDGE students are raising families while working long hours in service industries such as hotels and restaurants, or as childcare providers. Although they have received college degrees in their native countries, they often lack familiarity with the American educational system and need to strengthen their command of written and spoken English to succeed in a rigorous graduate program. Those who gain entry to BUSSW enrich and diversify our classes with the breadth of their life experience and global backgrounds.Who Are BRIDGE Students?
Our team includes two part-time faculty members who help BRIDGE students acclimate to the culture of American higher education and guide them as they tackle new concepts and skills. Throughout the semester, professors from BUSSW visit classes and introduce BRIDGE students to key social policy and advocacy concepts and—just as important—get to know them personally. Those students who are offered a place in our MSW program take a six-week writing class for additional preparation and are matched with a mentor who is a BRIDGE alum. Students not yet ready for the graduate program receive individualized guidance to strengthen their skills, such as a referral to a community college English-language program, and are encouraged to reapply to BUSSW when they’re ready.How Does BRIDGE Mentor Students?
BRIDGE has more than achieved its mission since its start in 2007. Alumni who have earned their MSW degrees at BUSSW now serve their communities as accomplished professionals in organizations such as the Child Witness to Violence Project at Boston Medical Center, the American Red Cross, and the Massachusetts Department of Children & Families.Results