I hope that all of you have had a wonderful National School Counseling Week, and that you have been celebrated and appreciated within your school communities for the tireless work that you do on behalf of students and families.
How do we continue to educate our communities about the change in our role since our students' parents were in school? How do we share that we strive to work with all students versus a select few? How can we communicate that we use data to develop programming to prevent issues of concern before they ever begin? Click on the video below to see one example of how school counselors across the country are getting the word out:
Thoughts, ideas, and resources on issues pertaining to school counseling
Showing posts with label marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marketing. Show all posts
Saturday, February 8, 2014
Monday, February 18, 2013
Yes, I'm Changing My Name
I feel that Jeff Ream, Erin Mason, and Danielle Schultz would be proud. I have officially taken the plunge.
From the Counselor's Office now has its own domain name, www.counselorsoffice.org. After a year-and-a-half and almost 100 posts, it seems only fair to make this level of commitment, not to mention teach myself how to acquire the new name and link it to the blog.
No worries--the old web address of counselorsoffice.blogspot.com will automatically forward you to the new one, and all links to former posts are still active. My hope is that this makes the blog easier to remember, search for, and find in the future.
From the Counselor's Office now has its own domain name, www.counselorsoffice.org. After a year-and-a-half and almost 100 posts, it seems only fair to make this level of commitment, not to mention teach myself how to acquire the new name and link it to the blog.
No worries--the old web address of counselorsoffice.blogspot.com will automatically forward you to the new one, and all links to former posts are still active. My hope is that this makes the blog easier to remember, search for, and find in the future.
Friday, January 13, 2012
Basketball Coach Advocates for School Counselors: Be the One
Shaka Smart, the coach at Virginia Commonwealth University, has created a short video encouraging kids to aim for college and telling them to seek out their school counselors to help them reach this goal. Another great clip for kids and parents alike:
Above and Beyond
The Partnership for 21st Century Skills has come out with a wonderful animated video (partnering with FableVision) that shows the power of the four C's: Communication, Collaboration, Critical Thinking, and Creativity. Its a wonderful resource to share with colleagues as well as parents and students.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Define Me
"We must not allow other people's limited perceptions to define us." Virginia Satir
Oh, Virginia Satir. I've been studying her this past weekend as one of the major players in family systems theory as I prepare to take a final test in order to become a licensed therapist here in Virginia. I know her more as a humanistic and communications family therapist than as a sage of words and quotes, yet the one above seems wildly appropriate.
Stay with me, people--I promise I'm zeroing in on the beginnings of a point.
You would think I was crazy if I came up to you and asked you to "define me." You tell me what my value is in this world. You tell me why I matter. You tell me why I am important and what I am supposed to do with my life.
Shouldn't I be the one to answer these questions for myself? Yes, feedback is important and the reflections of ourselves in the mirrors of others help us to continuously grow and change. However, it starts with each of us, and how we view who we are, where we fit in, and how we can have the most value is of paramount importance.
Except, apparently, if you are a school counselor. We have a huge identification problem. I was recently at a meeting in my school district where we tackled these questions, and we kept coming back to the same spot. One or both of the following tends to happen with school counselors. First, we tend to be defined by what we do instead of who we are and the impact that we can have, and secondly, we let other people define both who we are and what we do instead of doing it for ourselves. Additionally, there is no consistency from district to district, state to state, and from school to school, even. What one school counselor does in one school is not the same as what a guidance counselor does in another state is not the same as what a professional school counselor does in another district.
In other words, we're a hot mess.
Teachers and principals do not tend to have the same issue. Curriculum may change and class size may vary from place to place, but teachers "teach." Everyone can picture that pretty clearly, and everyone knows the impact that they can have. Administrators insure that schools run smoothly, manage day-to-day operations, and set the tone for a whole building--students, teachers, and the community-at-large. We know who principals are and what their role is. If you asked for a random sampling of people's perceptions of school counselors, you would get anything from people who discipline students to college recommendation writers to people whose job it is to file papers and drink coffee all day.
Something I will often talk about with my students is "control." A student will be failing a class, and their reason, when asked, will be that the teacher hates them. The teacher does not like them, therefore the student doesn't want to do any of the work or behave in class or study and decides they would rather fail the class. The teacher has all the power over their grade and their future success. What the student and I then talk about is the amount of control and power over their lives they have given to that teacher to chart the course of their life, and how they can get that power back.
As school counselors, it's time for us to reclaim our power and take control of who we are and where we are heading.
We're beginning to do it, and there is no better time than the present. There are several things that are aligning right now that could have a huge impact on the value that is placed on school counselors and at the same time will help us to more clearly define our roles for ourselves and for the communities that we work with. We know our skill-set--we know what we're trained to do.
First, the current national education administration is ready for educational reform, and college and career readiness is at the tip of everyone's tongue. Arne Duncan, the Secretary of Education, wrote an op-ed in this past Sunday's Washington Post in which he stated:
Finally, there is NOSCA--the National Office for School Counselor Advocacy. This organization is only about five years old, and is part of the College Board Advocacy and Policy Center. If you are like me, you got a survey from college board last year asking school counselors about the profession of school counseling. They released the results from this survey this past fall. Highlights include:
As school counselors, we are in a very unique position--we are able to get a picture of the whole student including school, home, work, sports, clubs, community, and goals/aspirations. We have the knowledge of the child to help open doors and point them to resources that will help them be academically successful in school as well as successful in life. Further, we are in the position in our schools in which we have the view of the students, the teachers, the administrators, the parents, and the community. We know who we can ask for assistance and how best to help students navigate the larger system in order to find their path to post-secondary training and future careers.
NOSCA as an organization has made available tons of resources in order to help school counselors become linked with this idea of college and career readiness. It starts with the Eight Components of College and Career Readiness--by clicking on this link, you will find definitions as well as resources to help you begin to assist your students. Further, I would highly recommend joining their Own the Turf Campaign which will connect you with e-mail resources as well as an online community to bounce ideas off of and from which to receive further resources.
Our mission, as defined by ASCA, is to remove barriers to academic success. By strengthening the idea of helping students to be college and career ready and giving it more focus, we are only enhancing our mission, but more importantly we are beginning to define, for ourselves, what our purpose in the educational system is. We, as a group, were left out of the initial development of No Child Left Behind. With the conversation beginning to center around post-secondary planning and skill building, and with ASCA and NOSCA becoming stronger voices and allies to our profession, we will not be left out of the next go around. As school counselors, we have a unique and valuable perspective of the whole student, the educational system, and the world of colleges and careers--we just need to define that perspective as a profession and then share it with the world.
The following work cited is available to members of the American School Counselor Association via their website, www.schoolcounselor.org:
Partnership for 21st Century Skills. (2011). A Critical Combination: School counselors play a vital role in integrating 21st-century skills and training into the school environment. School Counselor (November/December 2011).
Many thanks to the following people for your conversations over the last several months that have helped to form the ideas in this post: Valerie Hardy, Judy Hingle, Marcy Miller, and Elissia Price, all from Fairfax County Public Schools.
Oh, Virginia Satir. I've been studying her this past weekend as one of the major players in family systems theory as I prepare to take a final test in order to become a licensed therapist here in Virginia. I know her more as a humanistic and communications family therapist than as a sage of words and quotes, yet the one above seems wildly appropriate.
Stay with me, people--I promise I'm zeroing in on the beginnings of a point.
You would think I was crazy if I came up to you and asked you to "define me." You tell me what my value is in this world. You tell me why I matter. You tell me why I am important and what I am supposed to do with my life.
Shouldn't I be the one to answer these questions for myself? Yes, feedback is important and the reflections of ourselves in the mirrors of others help us to continuously grow and change. However, it starts with each of us, and how we view who we are, where we fit in, and how we can have the most value is of paramount importance.
Except, apparently, if you are a school counselor. We have a huge identification problem. I was recently at a meeting in my school district where we tackled these questions, and we kept coming back to the same spot. One or both of the following tends to happen with school counselors. First, we tend to be defined by what we do instead of who we are and the impact that we can have, and secondly, we let other people define both who we are and what we do instead of doing it for ourselves. Additionally, there is no consistency from district to district, state to state, and from school to school, even. What one school counselor does in one school is not the same as what a guidance counselor does in another state is not the same as what a professional school counselor does in another district.
In other words, we're a hot mess.
Teachers and principals do not tend to have the same issue. Curriculum may change and class size may vary from place to place, but teachers "teach." Everyone can picture that pretty clearly, and everyone knows the impact that they can have. Administrators insure that schools run smoothly, manage day-to-day operations, and set the tone for a whole building--students, teachers, and the community-at-large. We know who principals are and what their role is. If you asked for a random sampling of people's perceptions of school counselors, you would get anything from people who discipline students to college recommendation writers to people whose job it is to file papers and drink coffee all day.
Something I will often talk about with my students is "control." A student will be failing a class, and their reason, when asked, will be that the teacher hates them. The teacher does not like them, therefore the student doesn't want to do any of the work or behave in class or study and decides they would rather fail the class. The teacher has all the power over their grade and their future success. What the student and I then talk about is the amount of control and power over their lives they have given to that teacher to chart the course of their life, and how they can get that power back.
As school counselors, it's time for us to reclaim our power and take control of who we are and where we are heading.
We're beginning to do it, and there is no better time than the present. There are several things that are aligning right now that could have a huge impact on the value that is placed on school counselors and at the same time will help us to more clearly define our roles for ourselves and for the communities that we work with. We know our skill-set--we know what we're trained to do.
First, the current national education administration is ready for educational reform, and college and career readiness is at the tip of everyone's tongue. Arne Duncan, the Secretary of Education, wrote an op-ed in this past Sunday's Washington Post in which he stated:
"We all need to work together so that 10 years from now, America’s children will have the sort of federal education law they so richly deserve — one that challenges them to achieve to high standards, and provides them with the highly effective teachers and principals who can prepare them for success in college and the workforce." (source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/)Additionally, in a November 26 article in the Washington Post, there is discussion on the new NCLB waivers that the current administration is making available:
"The U.S. Education Department is offering the waivers to states that adopt an “index” system of multiple measures that go beyond annual test results in determining school performance. These include test score growth over time, graduation rates and other evidence that schools have produced students who are college- or career-ready." (source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/)Thus, there is a lot of discussion about "college and career" readiness in everyone's mind. In November's School Counselor, the publication sent to members of the American School Counselor Association, there is an article about 21st Century Skills that was written by the Partnership for 21st Century Skills. They state:
"Within the context of core knowledge instruction, students must also master the essential skills for success in today’s world, known collectively as the 4C’s: critical thinking and problem solving, communication, collaboration, and creativity and innovation....Comprehensive school counseling programs can make all the difference between students who are ready for college and careers and students who are not. School counselors play a crucial role in ensuring students know what will be expected of them in college and the workforce and provide a link between high school and the world at large for students. Knowing the emerging trends of workforce development can make school counselors invaluable allies and mentors for students and other educators in creating supportive learning environments in every school." (Partnership for 21st Century Skills, 2011)They see that one of the key components in helping students to become ready for the 21st century world of work is school counselors and the blend of our knowledge of the world of work, post-secondary options and planning, and the individual strengths of our students, families, and communities. Further, through our unique knowledge of our students, we can help to foster these skills of critical thinking, communication, collaboration, and creativity.
Finally, there is NOSCA--the National Office for School Counselor Advocacy. This organization is only about five years old, and is part of the College Board Advocacy and Policy Center. If you are like me, you got a survey from college board last year asking school counselors about the profession of school counseling. They released the results from this survey this past fall. Highlights include:
- 89% of counselors felt that the mission of the education system should be to ensure that all students, regardless of background, have equal access to a high-quality eduation, while only 38% believed that was actually the reality in their school.
- 85% of counselors felt that the mission of the education system should be to ensure that all students complete the 12th grade ready to succeed in college and careers, while only 30% believed this was actually the case in their school.
- 92% felt that the mission of school counselors was to advocate for all students, while only 54% felt that was the reality in their school
- Large majorities of school counselors (83% and above) felt that the mission of school counselors should be to inspire student to reach goals, address problems to help students graduate, ensure that all students earn a high school diploma ready to succeed, and help students mature and develop skills for the adult world. Only 49% or less of school counselors felt that this was the actual reality in their schools (source: nosca.collegeboard.com)
As school counselors, we are in a very unique position--we are able to get a picture of the whole student including school, home, work, sports, clubs, community, and goals/aspirations. We have the knowledge of the child to help open doors and point them to resources that will help them be academically successful in school as well as successful in life. Further, we are in the position in our schools in which we have the view of the students, the teachers, the administrators, the parents, and the community. We know who we can ask for assistance and how best to help students navigate the larger system in order to find their path to post-secondary training and future careers.
NOSCA as an organization has made available tons of resources in order to help school counselors become linked with this idea of college and career readiness. It starts with the Eight Components of College and Career Readiness--by clicking on this link, you will find definitions as well as resources to help you begin to assist your students. Further, I would highly recommend joining their Own the Turf Campaign which will connect you with e-mail resources as well as an online community to bounce ideas off of and from which to receive further resources.
Our mission, as defined by ASCA, is to remove barriers to academic success. By strengthening the idea of helping students to be college and career ready and giving it more focus, we are only enhancing our mission, but more importantly we are beginning to define, for ourselves, what our purpose in the educational system is. We, as a group, were left out of the initial development of No Child Left Behind. With the conversation beginning to center around post-secondary planning and skill building, and with ASCA and NOSCA becoming stronger voices and allies to our profession, we will not be left out of the next go around. As school counselors, we have a unique and valuable perspective of the whole student, the educational system, and the world of colleges and careers--we just need to define that perspective as a profession and then share it with the world.
The following work cited is available to members of the American School Counselor Association via their website, www.schoolcounselor.org:
Partnership for 21st Century Skills. (2011). A Critical Combination: School counselors play a vital role in integrating 21st-century skills and training into the school environment. School Counselor (November/December 2011).
Many thanks to the following people for your conversations over the last several months that have helped to form the ideas in this post: Valerie Hardy, Judy Hingle, Marcy Miller, and Elissia Price, all from Fairfax County Public Schools.
Sunday, November 13, 2011
VCA Conference 2011: Reflections
You've fielded your 10th phone call from an angry parent for the day. Yet another student wants to talk to you about a class change because they don't like the teacher. You've received 5 e-mails in the last 3 hours from a teacher wanting you to address problems he/she is having with a student. You have three classroom lessons you are supposed to lead about 9th grade transition at the same time you are supposed to be immediately responding to all of these other situations because the people involved all simultaneously believe that their concern is the most important.
Calgon! Take me away...
Sometimes it can be a challenge to think about the big picture when you get caught up in the day-to-day workings of your job as a school counselor. Who has time to think about marketing their school counseling program or pulling together resources for a much needed grief-group? Half the time you are just trying to make it through the day by addressing the needs of your various stakeholders and making sure you have things ready to tackle the next day's challenges. This is why professional development and conferences are so important--they give you a much needed break to recharge your batteries, provide inspiration, and connect you with resources to help better serve your population.
This was definitely the case with the Virginia Counselor's Association conference this past week in Portsmouth, Virginia. In two days I was able to gain some new insights into several topical areas, make some wonderful new professional connections, and have time to ponder ways to implement some of these concepts in my own program.
Calgon! Take me away...
Sometimes it can be a challenge to think about the big picture when you get caught up in the day-to-day workings of your job as a school counselor. Who has time to think about marketing their school counseling program or pulling together resources for a much needed grief-group? Half the time you are just trying to make it through the day by addressing the needs of your various stakeholders and making sure you have things ready to tackle the next day's challenges. This is why professional development and conferences are so important--they give you a much needed break to recharge your batteries, provide inspiration, and connect you with resources to help better serve your population.
This was definitely the case with the Virginia Counselor's Association conference this past week in Portsmouth, Virginia. In two days I was able to gain some new insights into several topical areas, make some wonderful new professional connections, and have time to ponder ways to implement some of these concepts in my own program.
Marketing Your School Counseling Program
I attended a session on how to get the word out to your stakeholders about what you do as a school counselor, led by Donna Dockery from Virginia Commonwealth University. If you want to get everyone on board, you have to educate your community on several things. First, your role as a school counselor--what is it? What is it not? This seemed to me to be key, and was one of the biggest takeaways I had from the whole conference. Dr. Dockery talked about how counselors, administrators, and teachers do not necessarily fully understand each other's roles, and how this can have an especially negative effect on counselors. Thus, she did a study at VCU in which teachers-in-training were given a short video and some information about the role of the school counselor as defined by ASCA. When compared to teachers-in-training who did not receive the same information there was a significant difference in their perceptions of what school counselors do. If our administrators and teachers do not have a clear idea of the appropriate duties of school counselors, is it any wonder that we are asked to discipline students or supervise in-school-suspensions? Perhaps there need to be meetings or in-services before the school year begins or right at the end in which all three school entities--teachers, administrators, and counselors--sit down and discuss their various roles, both the similarities and the differences. The adults in our buildings have grown up with the idea of the old "guidance counselor," so even while our students often see that we are actively engaged in working with all students in the areas of academic, personal/social, and career/college, our teacher and administrative peers may not have that same understanding. Try getting time at faculty meetings, department meetings, subschool meetings, etc. to give some brief information about our role and how it benefits all people in our communities, not only our students but our parents, teachers, and administrators.
Additionally, I was unable to attend any of his sessions but I did meet Neil McNerney, LPC, an adjunct professor in the graduate counseling program at Virginia Tech, Northern Virginia Campus, as well as a counselor with a great deal of experience working with adolescents and their families. He was kind enough to give me some great handouts, including tips on how to boost attendance at your parent presentations. However, I think that his ideas are not only applicable to parent presentations but also to helping to establish your counseling program with your school's parents, in general. I'm not going to publish all of his information here (I would recommend attending a session of his or e-mailing him if you want more information), but basically it's not just enough to do the robo-calls and the blast-out e-mails. We need to be engaging influential parents to help guarantee that people are attending the programs we spend a lot of time and staff putting together--have them go out into the community and work their parent-connected magic. Further, we need to let parents know what the benefit will be to them for attending our programs--what ideas, tips, or information are they going to be able to take away and use immediately from that presentation? In a busy world many parents need to know that it will really be worth their time to attend that session on homework help, substance abuse issues, or college-application preparedness. Neil does presentations to schools and parent groups in the Northern Virginia area--I would recommend checking him out.
LGBT Considerations
Edward Andrews, LPC, NCC, CT is an up-and-coming expert on LGBT issues in counseling. He practices both with Kaiser-Permanente as well as in his own private-practice in DC and Alexandria, Virginia. What I found fascinating about his workshop was that it was looking at recently released health-data that now includes LGBT statistics. I won't go into all of the details, but the one I found the most interesting is that most health professionals (doctors, nurses, counselors, psychiatrists, psychologist, etc.) do not ask about clients sexual orientation, history, etc. when working with their patients. You're probably thinking, "We're school counselors--how does this really effect us?" It makes me wonder how comfortable school counselors are in working with their LGBT students? If students are struggling with their sexuality, how comfortable are most school counselors, in general, discussing this? Is there enough training being given to the issues specific to LGBT youth (higher incidences of bullying, higher incidences of suicide, more difficulty socializing and making friends) so that school counselors are not only able to address the concerns when they happen but be proactive in helping their schools be welcoming and comfortable environments for this population? Worth some consideration.
Grief
Ed also did a workshop on grief counseling, focusing on making meaning with a loss. There were two things that I think would be helpful considerations for any school counselor looking to do a grief group. First, he gave an example of a group run using narrative therapy, all online, that in a study proved to be highly effective. Perhaps using Blackboard or some other similar program, would it be useful to have an online-component in a school group? Students would answer prompts and post these narratives, perhaps inviting feedback from other group participants. Secondly, there are a great many kinesthetic techniques that can be used to help facilitate working with the process of grief--personal journals, letters to the lost, biographies, musical memoirs, memory books, poetry. I think that often we go to our comfort zone as counselors--talking. For many kids (and adults, for that matter), talking may not always be the most comfortable mode for them to be able to express deep emotions. Just as teachers try to teach to different modalities when presenting classroom information, we should try to hit on several ways for students to be able to work through grief--consider having them create items such as memory boxes or collages, or have them write stories in an online format.
Overall, it was a wonderful conference--I cannot recommend enough getting involved with national and local professional organizations and making a point of attending conferences, even if it is only once a year and local. We all need the time to meet with colleagues from other schools and collaborate on ways to better serve all of our students.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)