Faculty Spotlight with Catherine Breneman

By James Fay

Catherine Breneman, assistant professor of social work and director of field education. 

Breneman received her bachelor’s degree from the University of Pittsburgh and a master’s in social work at West Virginia University. She earned her PhD at the University of Pittsburgh and is taking post-graduate classes to keep her skills up to date in the clinics.  

Q: Where are you from?

A: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Q: Have you taught anywhere else prior to Hood?

A: Towson University for 10 years.

Q: How long have you been teaching?

A: 14 years. 10 years at Towson and four years at Hood.

Q: Why did you choose Hood?

A: I took a position at Towson which was a larger school but decided I wanted a smaller liberal arts school. So, I came to Hood during the pandemic which was an interesting transition time. 

Q: What got you into teaching? 

A: I have been a social worker for 30 years. I had a lot of experience and worked in a variety of settings and was doing some teaching on the side. I decided to pursue my Ph.D. later and after that, I started to transition full-time faculty position at Towson.

Q: Why do you enjoy teaching social work to students?

A: Because social work has been such a wonderful career to me. I think preparing future social workers and other students in other majors who might experience people with life problems is very import to understand and prepare for what they encounter.

Q: What classes do you teach here at Hood?

A: I teach Introduction to Families, Community Mental Health, Addictions, Social Work Field Seminar and my primary responsibility as the field director is I coordinate the 500-hour field placement for seniors that they are required to do for their major. I look to identify sites in the community that we can partner with to match students with those places. 

Q: What research are you interested in?

A: I’m interested in case management and working with people with behavioral health needs. I’m also interested in working with children and families coping with illness.

Q: What is your biggest challenge here at Hood?

A: My biggest challenge is to help students recognize their confidence in their skills and ability to be more confident and competent in their decisions and support them.

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