School counselor

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Guidance counselor
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A school counselor is a certified/licensed professional that provides academic, career, college readiness, and social-emotional support for all students. There are school counselor positions within each level of schooling (elementary, middle, high, and college). By developing and following a school counseling program, school counselors are able to provide students of all ages with the appropriate support and guidance needed for overall success.[1]

Purpose

Professional school counselors ideally implement a school counseling program that promotes and enhances student achievement (Hatch & Bowers, 2003, 2005; ASCA, 2012).[2] A framework for appropriate and inappropriate school counselor responsibilities and roles is outlined in the ASCA National Model (Hatch & Bowers, 2003, 2005; ASCA, 2012).[2]

School counselors are employed in elementary, middle, and high schools, in district supervisory settings, in Counselor Education faculty positions (usually with an earned Ph.D. in Counselor Education in the USA or related graduate doctorates abroad), and post-secondary settings doing academic, career, college access/affordability/admission, and social-emotional counseling, consultation, and program coordination. Their work includes a focus on developmental stages of student growth, including the needs, tasks, and student interests related to those stages (Schmidt, 2003).[3]

Professional school counselors meet the needs of students in four basic domains: academic development,

personality and career assessment methods (such as the Self-Directed Search [SDS][5] or Career Key[6] [based on the Holland Codes
]) to help students explore career and college needs and interests.

Schools play a key role in assessment, access to services, and possible referral to appropriate outside support systems.[7] They provide intervention, prevention, and services to support students' academic, career, and post-secondary education as well as social-emotional growth. The role of school counselors is expansive. School counselors address mental health issues, crisis intervention, and advising for course selection.[8] School counselors consult with all stakeholders to support student needs and may also focus on experiential learning, cooperative education, internships, career shadowing, and entrance to specialized high school programs.[9]

Methods

The four main school counseling program interventions include school counseling curriculum classroom lessons and annual academic, career/college access/affordability/admission, and social-emotional planning for every student; and group and individual counseling for some students.[10]

School counselor interventions include individual and group counseling for some students. For example, if a student's behavior is interfering with his or her achievement, the school counselor may observe that student in a class, provide consultation to teachers and other stakeholders to develop (with the student) a plan to address the behavioral issue(s), and then collaborate to implement and evaluate the plan. They also provide consultation services to family members such as college access/affordability/admission, career development, parenting skills, study skills, child and adolescent development, mental health issues, and help with school-home transitions.

School counselor interventions for all students include annual academic/career/college access/affordability/admission planning K–12 and leading classroom developmental lessons on academic, career/college, and social-emotional topics. The topics of mental health, multiculturalism (Portman, 2009), anti-racism, and school safety are important areas of focus for school counselors. Often school counselors will coordinate outside groups to help with student needs such as academics, or coordinate a program that teaches about child abuse or drugs, through on-stage drama (Schmidt,[3] 2003).

School counselors develop, implement, and evaluate school counseling programs that deliver academic, career, college access/affordability/admission, and social-emotional competencies to all students in their schools. For example, the ASCA National Model (Hatch & Bowers, 2003, 2005; ASCA, 2012)[2] includes the following four main areas:[11]

  • Foundation (Define as of 2019) – a school counseling program mission statement, a vision statement, a beliefs statement, SMART Goals; ASCA Mindsets & Behaviors & ASCA Code of Ethics;
  • Delivery System (Deliver as of 2019) – how school counseling core curriculum lessons, planning for every student, and individual and group counseling are delivered in direct and indirect services to students (80% of school counselor time);
  • Management System (Manage as of 2019) – calendars; use of data tool; use of time tool; administrator-school counselor agreement; school counseling program advisory council; small group, school counseling core curriculum, and closing the gap action plans; and
  • Accountability System (Assess as of 2019) – school counseling program assessment; small group, school counseling core curriculum, and closing-the-gap results reports; and school counselor performance evaluations based on school counselor competencies.[12]

The school counseling program model (ASCA, 2012, 2019) is implemented using key skills from the National Center for Transforming School Counseling's Transforming School Counseling Initiative: Advocacy, Leadership, Teaming and Collaboration, and Systemic Change.

School Counselors are expected to follow a professional code of ethics in many countries. For example, In the US, they are the American School Counselor Association (ASCA) School Counselor Ethical Code, the American Counseling Association (ACA) Code of Ethics, and the National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) Statement of Principles of Good Practice (SPGP).[13]

Role confusion

Some school counselors experience role confusion, given the many tasks they are expected to perform.[14][15][8][16][9][7] The demands on the school counselor to be a generalist who performs roles in leadership, advocacy, essential services, and curriculum development can be too much if there is not a clear mission, vision, and comprehensive school counseling program in place.[7] Additionally, some school counselors are stretched too thin to provide mental health support on top of their other duties.[8]

The role of a school counselor is critical and needs to be supported by all stakeholders to ensure equity and access for all students, particularly those with the fewest resources.[17] The roles of school counselors are expanding[18] and changing with time[19] As roles change, school counselors help students prosper in academics, career, post-secondary, and social-emotional domains. School counselors reduce and bridge the inequalities facing students in educational systems.[20]

Types of school counselors

Elementary school counselor

Elementary school counselors provide[21] academic, career, college access, and personal and social competencies and planning to all students, and individual and group counseling for some students and their families to meet the developmental needs of young children K–6.[22] Transitions from pre-school to elementary school and from elementary school to middle school are an important focus for elementary school counselors. Increased emphasis is placed on accountability for helping close achievement and opportunity gaps at the elementary level as more school counseling programs move to evidence-based work with data and specific results.[23][24]

School counseling programs that deliver specific competencies to all students help to close achievement and opportunity gaps.[25] To facilitate individual and group school counseling interventions, school counselors use developmental, cognitive-behavioral, person-centered (Rogerian) listening and influencing skills, systemic, family, multicultural,[26] narrative, and play therapy theories and techniques.[21][27] Sink & Stroh (2003) released a research study showing the effectiveness of elementary school counseling programs in Washington state.[28]

Middle school counselor

Middle school counselors provide school counseling curriculum lessons[21] on academic, career, college access, and personal and social competencies, advising and academic/career/college access planning to all students and individual and group counseling for some students and their families to meet the needs of older children/early adolescents in grades 7 and 8.[29]

Middle School College Access curricula have been developed to assist students and their families before reaching high school. To facilitate the school counseling process, school counselors use theories and techniques including developmental, cognitive-behavioral, person-centered (Rogerian) listening and influencing skills, systemic, family, multicultural,[26] narrative, and play therapy. Transitional issues to ensure successful transitions to high school are a key area including career exploration and assessment with seventh and eighth grade students.[30][31] Sink, Akos, Turnbull, & Mvududu released a study in 2008 confirming the effectiveness of middle school comprehensive school counseling programs in Washington state.[32]

High school counselor

High school counselors provide[21] academic, career, college access, and personal and social competencies with developmental classroom lessons and planning to all students, and individual and group counseling for some students and their families to meet the developmental needs of adolescents (Hatch & Bowers, 2003, 2005, 2012).[33] Emphasis is on college access counseling at the early high school level as more school counseling programs move to evidence-based work with data and specific results[34] that show how school counseling programs help to close achievement, opportunity, and attainment gaps ensuring all students have access to school counseling programs and early college access/affordability/admission activities.[35] The breadth of demands high school counselors face, from educational attainment (high school graduation and some students' preparation for careers and college) to student social and mental health, has led to ambiguous role definition.[36] Summarizing a 2011 national survey of more than 5,330 middle school and high school counselors, researchers argued: "Despite the aspirations of counselors to effectively help students succeed in school and fulfill their dreams, the mission and roles of counselors in the education system must be more clearly defined; schools must create measures of accountability to track their effectiveness; and policymakers and key stakeholders must integrate counselors into reform efforts to maximize their impact in schools across America".[37]

Transitional issues to ensure successful transitions to college, other post-secondary educational options, and careers are a key area.

careers) by engaging students and their families in accessing and evaluating accurate information on what the National Office for School Counselor Advocacy calls the eight essential elements of college and career counseling: (1) College Aspirations, (2) Academic Planning for Career and College Readiness, (3) Enrichment and Extracurricular Engagement, (4) College and Career Exploration and Selection Processes, (5) College and Career Assessments, (6) College Affordability Planning, (7) College and Career Admission Processes, and (8) Transition from High School Graduation to College Enrollment.[39]
Some students turn to private college admissions advisors but there is no research evidence that private college admissions advisors have any effectiveness in assisting students attain selective college admissions.

Lapan, Gysbers & Sun showed correlational evidence of the effectiveness of fully implemented school counseling programs on high school students' academic success.[40] Carey et al.'s 2008 study showed specific best practices from high school counselors raising college-going rates within a strong college-going environment in multiple USA-based high schools with large numbers of students of non-dominant cultural identities.

Some school counselors use bibliotherapy, i.e., books and other media, to help students in individual and group counseling and classroom counseling lessons.

Global standing of school counselors

Countries that provide school counseling[41]
Armenia Australia Austria Bahamas Belgium
Bhutan Botswana Brazil Canada China
Costa Rica Croatia Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark
Egypt Estonia Finland France Gambia
Georgia Germany Ghana Greece Netherlands
Hong Kong Iceland India Indonesia Iran
Ireland Israel Italy Japan Jordan
Latvia Lebanon Lithuania Macau Malaysia
Malta Nepal New Zealand Nigeria Norway
Oman Philippines Poland Portugal Romania
Rwanda Saudi Arabia Serbia Singapore Slovakia
South Korea Spain St. Kitts Sweden Switzerland
Syria Taiwan Tanzania Thailand Trinidad & Tobago
Turkey Uganda United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States
Venezuela Vietnam

A school counselor is an integral part of the education system in countries representing over half of the world's population and in other countries it is emerging as a critical support for elementary, middle, and high school learning, as well as post-secondary options.[42]

Countries vary in how a school counseling program and services are provided based on economics (funding for schools and school counseling programs), social capital (private versus public schools), and school counselor certification and credentialing movements in education departments, professional associations, and local, state/province, and national legislation.[43][44]

School counseling is established in 62 countries and emerging in another seven.[42] An international scoping project on school-based counseling showed school counseling is mandatory in 39 countries, 32 USA states, one Australian state, three German states, two countries in the United Kingdom, and three provinces in Canada.[42] Some countries within the Americas, Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Pacific Islands lack formal school counseling programs and instead utilize teachers or psychologists to fulfill the school counselor position with an emphasis on career development.[43] Moreover, In some countries, school counseling is provided by school counseling specialists (for example, Botswana, China, Finland, Israel, Malta, Nigeria, Romania, Taiwan, Turkey, United States). In other cases, school counseling is provided by classroom teachers who either have such duties added to their typical teaching load or teach only a limited load that also includes school counseling activities (India, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Zambia).[44] The IAEVG focuses on career development with some international school counseling articles and conference presentations.[44] Both the IAEVG and the Vanguard of Counsellors promote school counseling internationally.

Canada

The roots of school counseling stemmed from a response to the conditions created by the industrial revolution in the early 1900s.[45] Originally, school counseling was often referred to as vocational guidance, where the goal of the profession was to help individuals find their path in a time where individuals previous ways of making a living had been displaced.[45] As people moved towards industrialized cities, counseling was required to help students navigate these new vocations. With a great discrepancy between the rich and the poor, vocational counseling was initiated to help support disadvantaged students.[45] After World War II, vocational guidance began to shift towards a new movement of counseling, which provided a theoretical backing.[45] As the role of school counselors progressed into the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s there has become more uncertainty as to what the role entails.[45] This role confusion continues into the 21st century, where there is a lack of clear consensus between counselors, other teachers, administration, students and parents on what school counselors should be prioritizing.[46]

China

China has put substantial financial resources into school counseling with strong growth in urban areas but less than 1% of rural students receive it; China does not mandate school counseling.[47]

In China, Thomason & Qiong discussed the main influences on school counseling as Chinese philosophers Confucius and Lao-Tzu, who provided early models of child and adult development who influenced the work of Abraham Maslow and Carl Rogers.[47]

Only 15% of high school students are admitted to college in China, so entrance exams are fiercely competitive. Students entering university graduate at a rate of 99%.[48] Much pressure is put on children and adolescents to study and attend college. This pressure is a central focus of school counseling in China. An additional stressor is that there are not enough places for students to attend college, and over one-third of college graduates cannot find jobs,[19] so career and employment counseling and development are also central in school counseling.

In China, there is a stigma related to social-emotional and mental health issues; therefore, even though most universities and many (urban) primary and secondary schools have school counselors, many students are reluctant to seek counseling for issues such as anxiety and depression. There is no national system of certifying school counselors. Most are trained in Western-developed cognitive methods including REBT, Rogerian, Family Systems, Behavior Modification, and Object Relations.[47] School counselors also recommend Chinese methods such as qigong (deep breathing) and acupuncture, as well as music therapy.[47][49] Chinese school counselors work within a traditional Chinese worldview of a community and family-based system that lessens the focus on the individual. In Hong Kong, Hui (2000) discussed work moving toward comprehensive school counseling programs and eliminating the older remediation-style model.[50]

Middle school students are a priority for school counseling services in China.

School counselors around the world are affiliated with various national and regional school counseling associations, and abide by their guidelines. These associations include:

  • African Counseling Association (AfCA)
  • Asociacion Argentina de Counselors (AAC-Argentina)
  • Associacao Portuguesa de Psicoterapia centrada na Pessoa e de Counselling (APPCPC-Portugal)
  • Australian Guidance and Counselling Association (AGCA)
  • Hong Kong Association of Guidance Masters and Career Masters (HKAGMCM)
  • Cypriot Association of School Guidance Counsellors (OELMEK)
  • European Counseling Association (ECA)
  • France Ministry of Education
  • Hellenic Society of Counselling and Guidance (HESCOG-Greece)
  • International Baccalaureate (IB)
  • International Society of Psychotherapy and Counselling (ISPC)
  • International Vanguard of Counsellors (IVC)
  • International Association for Educational and Vocational Guidance (IAEVG)
  • Association Internationale d'Orientation Scolaire et Professionnelle (AIOSP)
  • Internationale Vereinigung für Schul- und Berufsberatung (IVSBB)
  • Asociación Internacional para la Orientación Educativa y Profesional (AIOEP)
  • Institute of Guidance Counselors (IGC) (Ireland)
  • Kenya Association of Professional Counselors (KAPC)
  • Department of Education-Malta
  • New Zealand Association of Counsellors/Te Roopu Kaiwhiriwhiri o Aotearoa (NZAC)
  • Counseling Association of Nigeria (CASSON)
  • Philippine Guidance and Counseling Association (PGCA)
  • Counseling & Psychotherapy in Scotland (COSCA)
  • Singapore Association for Counseling (SAC)
  • Federación Española de Orientación y Psicopedagogía (FEOP-Spain)
  • The Taiwan Guidance and Counseling Association (TGCA)
  • Counselling Children and Young People (BACP affiliate, UK)
  • British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP-UK)
  • American Counseling Association (ACA-USA)
  • American School Counselor Association (ASCA-USA)
  • Center for Excellence in School Counseling and Leadership (CESCaL) (USA)
  • Center for School Counseling Outcome Research (CSCOR-USA) Council for the Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP-USA and international)
  • National Board for Certified Counselors (NBCC, USA)
  • National Office for School Counselor Advocacy (NOSCA) at The College Board (USA)
  • National Center for Transforming School Counseling (NCTSC) at The Education Trust (USA)
  • Overseas Association of College Admissions Counselors (OACAC an affiliate of National Association of College Admissions Counselors-USA)
  • Canadian Counselling and Psychotherapy Association – National School Counsellors Chapter (CPPA)[51]
  • Newfoundland and Labrador Counsellors' and Psychologists' Association[52]
  • PEI Counselling Association[52]
  • British Columbia School Counsellors[52]
  • Guidance Council of the Alberta Teachers' Association[52]
  • Ontario School Counsellors' Association[52]
  • Nova Scotia School Counsellors Association[52]

Education, certification, training, & accreditation

In the United States, a master's degree in counseling, school counseling, or related fields is required to become a school counselor. A few states may require additional training and/or certification to be eligible for employment. However, all public school counselors must receive a state government issued credential in order to practice counseling.[53] Obtaining  certification/licensure requires a master's degree, an internship and/or practicum experience with a licensed school counselor, and completion of either a state or national test.[54] A few states may require counselors to have classroom teaching experience prior to becoming a school counselor.[53]

Those wanting to pursue a career in school counseling should ensure that their university program maintains the appropriate accreditation. In the United States, the largest accreditation body for Counselor Education/School Counseling programs is

the Council for the Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP).[55]
International Counselor Education programs are accredited through a CACREP affiliate, the International Registry of Counselor Education Programs (IRCEP).

The education of school counselors around the world varies based on the laws and cultures of countries and the historical influences of their educational and credentialing systems and professional identities related to who delivers academic, career, college readiness, and personal/social information, advising, curriculum, and counseling and related services.[56]

Additional information is needed to review the necessary requirements for other countries.

Salary, benefits, and expected job growth

In 2021, the median pay for school counselors in the United States was $60,510 annually or $29.09 per hour. But, a school counselor's salary can range anywhere between $37,550 to $98,190 according the most recent report completed by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.[53]

Most State Education Boards require that school districts offer school counselors health, dental, and vision insurance. Additionally, school counselors can receive retirement plans as well as professional development assistance.[57][58] Lastly, school counselors enjoy the same vacation time as students, meaning counselors receive time off for each holiday that falls within the school calendar as well as a summer vacation each year.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects the school counselor position to grow 10% between 2021 and 2031; meaning there will be an additional 32,000 job openings within the next 10 years.[53]

Additional information is needed to report on worldwide salary, benefits, and expected job growth statistics.

Notable school counselors

See also

References

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Evidence- and research-based school counseling articles, books, DVDs

Abilities, disabilities, gifts, talents, and special education in school counseling

Academic interventions, closing achievement gaps

Accountability; evidence- and data-based school counseling program curricula, evaluation, and practices

Advocacy, empowerment, equity, social justice

ASCA National Model, school counseling programs, closing gaps

Bilingual school counseling

Career and college access/admission/readiness; closing opportunity/attainment gaps

Caseloads, collaboration, resources, schedule changes, school counselor/student ratios

Counseling theories in schools

Credentialing exams for school counselors

  • Schellenberg, R. (2012). The school counselor’s study guide for credentialing exams. New York: Routledge.

Cultural competence, ethnic/racial identity development in schools

Counseling core curriculum, lesson plans, classroom management

Ethics and law in school counseling

Gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender school counseling

Group counseling in schools

International school counseling

American school counseling for developing a Korean school counseling model. Korean Journal of Counseling Psychology, 19, 539–567.

Leadership, systemic change, principal perceptions of school counseling

Outcome research in school counseling

Personal/social interventions: abuse, addictions, anxiety, bullying, conflict, obesity, peer mediation, self-mutilation, violence

Poverty, homelessness, classism

Rural school counseling

School-family-community partnerships; parenting interventions for academic success

Supervision, site supervisors, and school counselor education

Technology and school counseling

Transforming school counseling roles and professional identity

External links