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Skegee Spotlight: Jacqueline McArthur-Taylor

June 04, 2018

The Office of Communications, Public Relations and Marketing regularly shines its "'Skegee Spotlight" on employees, ۿ۴ý and alumni who help make ۿ۴ýUniversity "the Pride of the swift-growing South."

Sometimes life comes full-circle ­­–– well, at least for Jacqueline McArthur-Taylor who aids social work ۿ۴ý during their tenure at ۿ۴ýUniversity. McArthur-Taylor, a proud ۿ۴ýalum works as the director of field instruction in the Department of Social Work. Her 14-year dedication has proven her vested interest in the field and changing the lives of those who enter the department under her scope.  

Making the Best Match

McArthur-Taylor is a graduate of Tuskegee’s social work program, and she says she first became interested in this field because of her love for helping people.

“Ever since I can remember, I’ve had that cliched desire to ‘help people,’ and I was drawn to social work based on the fact that social workers impact the lives of people who need help the most,” she said. “And I’ve always felt like, maybe there’s something I can do too.”

As a field instructor, McArthur-Taylor matches junior-level ۿ۴ý with internships at local agencies, such as hospitals, nursing homes, juvenile facilities and even food banks.

McArthur-Taylor says the most rewarding part of her job is being a gate-keeper to her profession and seeing her ۿ۴ý’ growth.

“I don’t practice social work anymore, but I’m a social work educator, which means I’m training the next generation of social workers,” she noted.

“I want to make sure our ۿ۴ý are offered opportunities that deal with real jobs in the real world, and it takes commitment,” she continued. “If ۿ۴ý have the commitment, I know they will care about their future careers.”

Being an Advocate

The biggest aspect of being a social work professional is serving as an advocate.

“I constantly remind ۿ۴ý they are advocating for those who sometimes may not have a voice, and the ۿ۴ý are the ones who, as professionals, can make a positive change happen in someone’s life,” she said.

McArthur-Taylor says she also reminds ۿ۴ý to be accountable and gives them tough love as part of her own efforts to hold ۿ۴ý accountable for their work.

“I try to get ۿ۴ý to understand that every assignment should be treated as if it were their client, and if they fail that assignment, they’ve just failed their client,” she noted.

She says ۿ۴ý sometimes don’t realize that they will make life-altering decisions for people; they will decide how much food people may get, how much cash assistance they may receive, and what type of needs they may receive services for.  

Bigger Outcomes

McArthur-Taylor says to get ۿ۴ý more involved with the program and actually feel like they are social workers, the department is launching a new project this fall –– the Barbie and superheroes project.

The purpose of the project is to better educate ۿ۴ý about the social work profession and the different career avenues available to them in the field.

“It’s part of an assignment, and it helps ۿ۴ý understand the many careers available in social work –– from working in healthcare, prisons, or even animal-assisted therapy,” she said. “The role of a social worker has endless opportunities.”

Visit the Department of Social Work's webpage for more information about the social work program.