BSW

Get insights from 261 questions on BSW, answered by students, alumni, and experts. You may also ask and answer any question you like about BSW

Follow Ask Question
261

Questions

0

Discussions

18

Active Users

35

Followers

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 378 Views

A
Akash Jain

Contributor-Level 8

 Hi, BSW LLB is one of the emerging courses in law. It stands for Bachelor in Social Work and Bachelor in Law. One point that I would like to emphasize is that since it is new, the job prospects differ quite from the traditional ones. The work areas are very interesting and if working for social causes drives you and you would like to bring changes to things around you, this course is the right one for you. The job prospects include working with research groups and policy think tanks that advise and suggest govt. Concerning framing social legislation. Further, you would also be the first choice of several national as well as inter
...more

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 60 Views

P
Priyank Devgan

Beginner-Level 4

Hi,
The Department traces its origin to the establishment of the Y.W.C.A School of Social Work in 1946 at Lucknow. It was established by the Y.W.C.A of India, Burma and Ceylon, which later became National Y.W.C.A of India. It started a one year programme to give training in social work to the women who were demobilized by the Armed Services, known as the Womens Auxillary Corps of India, following the end of World War II in 1946.
The school started under the directorship of MS. Nora Ventura who was then the Secretary of Religious Education Committee of the Y.W.C.A, with two students - one from Sindh and the other from Bengal. Later in 194
...more

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 56 Views

A
Ajeet Singh

Beginner-Level 4

A career in the field of social work will provide individuals with an opportunity to help people who have troubles of many kinds. This will include social, educational, domestic or other factors.
The subjects would include:
English, Introduction to field work practices, Introduction to social work, Sociology for social workers, Field work, Human growth and behavior, Indian Social problems, Introduction to local self-government, Population Education, Social case work, Economy and co-operation, English, Field work, Introduction to social work research, Legislation in India, Social group work, Field work, Fields of social work, Introduction
...more

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 256 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Krishna Rodge

Contributor-Level 7

Hi,
There is no major difference as such with the LLB degree subjects that you study. They are the same. The only difference is with the subjects you study in the BLS and BSW degree. The subjects that you study in the first two years of the degree (BLS and BSW) differ from one another but the subjects in your LLB degree remains almost the same. So there is no major difference between these two courses.
Hope this information helps you.
Feel free to revert for any further details and information.
All the very best!

New answer posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 792 Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Abhishek VikramLawyer.UPSC Aspirant,Avid reader

Guide-Level 13

Hi,
The major difference is the stream i.e. BSW or B.Com along with LLB.
In both of courses, you shall have law subjects which shall be same for 5-years and along with that you will have your stream subjects i.e. of B.Com and BSW.
BSW is to do more with subjects including sociology, social science, various approaches to social work, etc.
While B.Com shall include business management, cost and managerial accounting, tax, etc.
The difference lies in the subjects i.e. stream subjects only.
Rest, you get the same set of law subjects while pursuing the degree.

New question posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 31 Views

New question posted

7 years ago

2 Followers 85 Views

New question posted

7 years ago

0 Follower 24 Views

New answer posted

7 years ago

2 Followers 3.7k Views

Shiksha Ask & Answer
Sunil SoniManagement & IT Consultant

Scholar-Level 18

You are eligible to apply for civil services examination after BSW degree provided you have obtained a degree from any of the universities incorporated by an act of the Central or State Legislature in India or other educational institutions established by an Act of Parliament or declared to be deemed as a university, under Section-3 of the University Grants Commission Act, 1956. You must also meet age and other criteria defined by UPSC.

Get authentic answers from experts, students and alumni that you won't find anywhere else

Sign Up on Shiksha

On Shiksha, get access to

  • 64k Colleges
  • 966 Exams
  • 618k Reviews
  • 1450k Answers

Share Your College Life Experience

×
×

This website uses Cookies and related technologies for the site to function correctly and securely, improve & personalise your browsing experience, analyse traffic, and support our marketing efforts and serve the Core Purpose. By continuing to browse the site, you agree to Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy.