“…Increased global communication elucidates the similarities of social challenges faced by nations throughout the world and improves access, literacy, empathy, and responsibility internationally. Social work professionals are expected to be literate in the global interconnectedness of oppression, social and economic injustices, social welfare policy, and social service delivery, specifically between social work practice, social development, and empowerment (Hawkins & Knox, 2014;Crisp, 2015). As social work and social welfare models used in mainstream western countries represent only a subset of the large number of possible intervention strategies available to respond to the diverse needs of communities and societies, online technology, facilitated by faculty members via a "global classroom," provided a platform for social work students to explore the historical, environmental, cultural, religious, political and economic factors that impact social welfare policies and the delivery of human services in different regions of the world.…”