About
Sidney Goldberg
Sidney Goldberg’s 25 year career in child welfare included casework and administration. He created and directed The Pathways to Development Program in Chicago and New York City, which provided serious opportunities for children living in foster care to explore, pursue and develop their interests so that they would be able, like the rest of us, to establish satisfying and meaningful lives. Pathways was the feature of a 1996 New York Times article.
Sidney studied with and was supervised by psychologist Albert Ellis, founder of Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy. He was awarded the Chicago Housing Authority Community Service Award; the Service Provider’s Award by Malcolm X College, West Side Learning Center and The Youth Campus Award for the founding of The Pathways to Development Program. Sidney’s interest in seeing real change occur in the child welfare system has led him to continue thinking about ways to make that happen.
Sidney Goldberg’s 25 year career in child welfare included casework and administration. He created and directed The Pathways to Development Program in Chicago and New York City, which provided serious opportunities for children living in foster care to explore, pursue and develop their interests so that they would be able, like the rest of us, to establish satisfying and meaningful lives. Pathways was the feature of a 1996 New York Times article.
Sidney studied with and was supervised by psychologist Albert Ellis, founder of Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy. He was awarded the Chicago Housing Authority Community Service Award; the Service Provider’s Award by Malcolm X College, West Side Learning Center and The Youth Campus Award for the founding of The Pathways to Development Program. Sidney’s interest in seeing real change occur in the child welfare system has led him to continue thinking about ways to make that happen.