Right. The whole thing would move by the initial voltage.
I'm beginning to think that they are intending a definition of "work done on a capacitor" that involves the signs of the voltages and currents. If i*v is positive then work is being done on the capacitor. If i*v is negative then the capacitor is doing work. If this is so, then consider the following.
Now, i*v is the instantaneous power. Integrating it over time would then yield the net work, and area area below the zero level would be work done by the capacitor (supplying power to move the charges).
So I think you can write expressions to represent i*v over the two time intervals where the current is +4 and -1 mA. You'll have to incorporate an offset voltage, say Vo, into the voltage expressions.
For example, assuming units of mA, mV, and μs, then over the first 4 time units the current is a constant +4 and an expression for the power during that interval is:
##4(V_o + \frac{8}{4}t)##
Do something similar for the second interval where the current is -1. Note that the voltage begins where it left off in the last interval.
Integrate them both over their respective time intervals. You'll want to find the Vo that makes their sum zero.