Social Work Schools in New Jersey

3 schools compared · Average earnings $33,038/yr

3 New Jersey schools offer Social Work. Earnings in New Jersey are in line with the national average, so compare programs on commute, tuition, and fit rather than on statewide outcomes alone.

Schools in NJ
3
Avg Grad Earnings
$33,038/yr
+7% vs. national avg
Avg Score
55/100

Social Work Training in New Jersey: What You Need to Know

Local program supply

New Jersey has 3 schools offering Social Work programs. Most students attend within 60 miles of home — local choice matters more than national rankings.

Earnings vs. national

Social Work graduates in New Jersey earn approximately $33,038/year on average, which is +7% above the national average for this trade. Source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard.

New Jersey-specific licensing

Most skilled trades require a state-issued license or certification before you can work independently. Requirements vary substantially by state. Verify New Jersey-specific licensing through the relevant state board (Department of Labor, Contractors Board, or trade-specific licensing body). Apprenticeship hours often count toward licensure.

How New Jersey compares

Average TradeSchoolOutlook Score for Social Work programs in New Jersey is 55/100. Cost of living, wage levels, and program supply all vary by state — see the school list below ranked by TradeSchoolOutlook Score, which combines earnings, debt, and job-market demand.

Social Work Programs in New Jersey

All 3 New Jersey schools offering Social Work, ranked by TradeSchoolOutlook Score. Click a school to see full earnings projections and program details.

# School Score Earnings ROI
1 Rowan College of South Jersey-Cumberland Campus
Vineland, NJ
57 $37,250/yr 43.5x
2 Rowan College of South Jersey-Gloucester Campus
Sewell, NJ
57 $37,250/yr 43.5x
3 Camden County College
Blackwood, NJ
50 $24,616/yr 50.6x
← See Social Work programs across all states
Data from College Scorecard, Bureau of Labor Statistics 2024–2034, and DOL RAPIDS. Methodology & sources →