Ann Obermann

Professor of Social Work

Social Work

Bio

Ann Obermann PhD, LCSW is an associate professor at MSU Denver teaching primarily in the BSSW program and coordinating online teaching and learning for both the BSSW and MSW programs. She has worked with the Denver metro community strengthening families across multiple systems for over 15 years as a case manager, family therapist, supervisor, and trainer before pursuing her PhD at University of Denver.

Degree

PhD in Social Work

University of Denver

MSW in Social Work

University of Wisconsin-Madison

BA in Social Work

St. Olaf College

Published Works

Research Interests

Ann's current research explores online learning specifically microaggressions in digital learning environments and student partnerships in course design. Her past research addressed occupational stress and workforce issues within child welfare and community mental health systems. Ann has presented nationally on occupational stress in child welfare; student design partnerships, critical digital pedagogy; and how social work distance education is increasing access to the profession of social work. Ann is a coauthor of 101 Careers in Social Work, numerous journal articles, and online training curriculums.

Teaching Interests

Ann's love for teaching social work is what motivated her pursuit of a PhD. She engages students in transformative learning experiences by encouraging critical exploration of self and course content, creating a classroom environment of support and challenge, and facilitating the effective exchange of knowledge. All of her courses include opportunities for students to create and publish demonstrations of their learning. This process facilitates students' knowledge acquisition, integration, application, and dissemination. It creates a community of learning where students see each other as experts and resources for future practice. In addition, Ann's classroom engages in exploration about how students' salient identities and role as social workers challenge power, privilege, and oppression at the micro, mezzo, and macro level. Being part of her students' journeys in discovering their passion and gifts in the work of social justice continues to motivate her never-ending journey of learning and teaching.