[humanser] Question about Accessible DSMIV-TR/5

Serena Cucco serena.c.cucco at gmail.com
Sun May 4 18:48:39 UTC 2014


Hi all,

Ericka, the more social work related books on Bookshare the better!
Unfortunately, since bookshare is about blind people and others
sharing books, this issue isn't NASW's problem.  As far as I know,
blind people or others voluntarily scan books and ask the Bookshare
people to put them on the site.

The cost of NASW is rather high.  That's the only reason I haven't
joined yet!  (I'm job hunting.)

Serena

On 5/4/14, Sandy <sandraburgess at msn.com> wrote:
> Ericka,
>
> There are a lot of nice materials job related on Bookshare; they have many
> books that deal with social work/human service type stuff and I do get some
>
> of them and do find them resourceful.  Currently I am not in NASW as I
> decided the cost is rather high when I am working very little.  Even my
> former clinic director won't join due to cost and said she got an email from
>
> then that was sent to the college where she teaches part-time.  Well, the
> email was NASW asking why more people don't join the organization.
>
> I don't have to take any test of that sort for my state, thank goodness.
>
>
> Sandy
>
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> From: "Ericka Short" <ericka.short at wi.rr.com>
> Sent: Saturday, May 03, 2014 9:48 PM
> To: "Human Services Mailing List" <humanser at nfbnet.org>
> Subject: Re: [humanser] Question about Accessible DSMIV-TR/5
>
>> Thanks for the info Sandy and yes, the cost is high for learning ally.
>>
>> Perhaps we have another things to work on with NASW.  Get more job related
>>
>> materials on bookshare.
>>
>> I just finished the annoying state statutes exam for WI.  I passed, but it
>>
>> was the most stressful online test I've ever taken.  I want to kill the
>> person who decided lawyerese had to be so darn confusing?  I got almost 90
>>
>> percent.  I started Googling answers rather than looking at the code book.
>>
>> Good luck to all who yet to do this in your state.
>>
>> Ericka J. Short
>> "No hand is too small or too big to do good in this world." EJ. Short
>>
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>
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