Career Guide · 2026

Self-Evaluation Examples for Social Workers

Updated June 2026 · By the RISN team

Performance review season puts social workers in a tricky spot: undersell yourself and you're overlooked, oversell and you lose credibility. Here's how social workers should write a self-evaluation that lands.

How Social Workers should structure a self-evaluation

Strong self-evaluations from social workers follow a formula: specific accomplishments with quantified impact, evidence of operating above your level, and one genuine growth area with a plan. Every claim should answer 'what did I do, and what changed because of it?'

Accomplishment examples for Social Workers

Whatever social workers do, the key is translating activity into outcome. Don't write 'responsible for X' — write what X achieved, with a number attached wherever possible. Specificity is what gets remembered in the room where decisions are made.

What Social Workers should avoid

Avoid vague superlatives like 'consistently exceeded expectations' with no evidence. Social Workers who pair every strength with a specific example come across as confident; those who rely on adjectives come across as inflated.

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