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Local School District Implementation of the Maine K-12 Comprehensive School Counseling Program

Local School District Implementation of the Maine K-12 Comprehensive School Counseling Program. Shelley Reed Maine Department of Education 207-624-6637 shelley.reed@maine.gov. Elena Perrello SAD #63 Eddington & Holden Schools 207-843-6010 elena_perrello@yahoo.com. Overview. The

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Local School District Implementation of the Maine K-12 Comprehensive School Counseling Program

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  1. Local School District Implementation of the Maine K-12 Comprehensive School Counseling Program Shelley Reed Maine Department of Education 207-624-6637 shelley.reed@maine.gov Elena Perrello SAD #63 Eddington & Holden Schools 207-843-6010 elena_perrello@yahoo.com

  2. Overview The American School Counselor Association (ASCA) has collaborated to create a National Model for School Counseling Programs to connect school counseling with current educational reform movements that emphasize student achievement and success.

  3. Defining School Counseling A profession that focuses on the relations and interactions between students and their school environment with the expressed purpose of reducing the effect of environmental and institutional barriers that impede student academic success. The Education Trust

  4. Rationale • partner as leaders in systemic change • ensure equity and access • promote academic, career and personal/ social development for every student By aligning a counseling program with the school’s mission and school improvement plan, professional school counselors:

  5. Historical Problems in School Counseling Programs • Lack of legitimization • Lack of consistent identity • Limited or no involvement in reform movements • Variation in roles from state to state and site to site • Non-school counselor responsibilities

  6. Historical Problems Have Continued • Lack of basic philosophy • Poor integration • Insufficient student access • Inadequate guidance for some students • Lack of counselor accountability • Failure to utilize other resources Source: From Gatekeeper to Advocate. Transforming the Role of the School Counselor, Hart, P.J. & M. Jacobi (1992)

  7. When schools fail to clearly define the counselor’s role... School administrators, parents with special interests, teachers or others may feel their agenda ought to be the school counseling program’s priority. The results often lead to confusion and criticisms when they are disappointed.(Carolyn Maddy Bernstein, 1995)

  8. Trends in Education • Education reform movement • Accountability • Standards-based movement • High-stakes testing • Achievement gap – equity and access • Block grants • Emphasis on improving school safety • Vouchers • Performance, not entitlement

  9. Current School Counseling Trends • ASCA’s Nt’l Standards for SC Programs • Transforming SC Initiative (Education Trust – Dewitt Wallace) • Increased number of state models • Results-based school counseling • Legislation for SC programs • ASCA’s National Model

  10. Chapter 125 Section 9.02 Checklist General Requirements • The District has a K-12 Comprehensive Guidance Program • The delivery and development of the program has been a coordinated effort of unit staff • The Comprehensive Guidance Program is included in the Comprehensive Education Plan • The program met the implementation date of 2006-2007

  11. Student-focused System-focused Focus of Barrier Removal

  12. CONTENT AREAS Academic Development Career Development Personal/Social Development STUDENT-FOCUSED SCHOOL COUNSELING

  13. Academic Development“Learning to Learn” • Develop skills for learning • Achieve school success • Relate academics to life success

  14. Career Development“Learning to Earn” • Develop career awareness • Identify career goals • Relate school to work

  15. Personal/Social Development“Learning to Live” • Acquire self-knowledge • Acquire interpersonal skills • Acquire personal safety skills

  16. Services to be provided to all students • Structured developmental experiences presented systematically through classroom and group activities to enhance the ability of students to meet the PEI content standards • A program of activities and planned strategies to help students manage their career development consistent with Career content standards and performance indicators.

  17. Student-Focused School Counseling: COUNSELING The help some students receive from credentialed professionals to overcome personal and social problems that interfere with learning. GUIDANCE The help all students receive from parents, teachers, counselors, community members and others to assist with educational and career development.

  18. Traditional Reactive Remediation Unstructured Individual counseling What counselors do Some students Comprehensive Proactive Prevention Structured Individual & group What students learn All students Traditional vs. Comprehensive School Counseling Program

  19. DIFFERENT CHOICES ACHIEVEMENT IMPROVES Why Student Focused Activities? SOUND SCHOOL COUNSELING

  20. Guiding All Kids: SYSTEMIC SCHOOL COUNSELING • How do you create a school counseling program that is: • Connected to the mission of the school? • Aligned with the student achievement goals?

  21. ASCA Standards + Local Indicators ASCA National Standards and Local Indicators Academic Development All 4th graders will describe their personal learning style. All 8th graders will develop a 4-yr high school course plan. All 10th graders will describe postsecondary education options. Career Development All 5th graders will describe their career interest areas. All 8th graders will describe the career majors offered at the HS. All 9th graders will conduct an information interview. Personal-Social Development All 3th graders will demonstrate a conflict mediation skills. All 6th graders will demonstrate anger management techniques. All 11th graders will demonstrate consensus building skills.

  22. Making the Transition to a Comprehensive Program 1. Planning the program & building the foundation • Where are we now? • Where do we want to be? 2.Designing the delivery system • How do we get to where we want to be? 3. Implementing & evaluating the program • How will we know when we get there?

  23. Goals to Address • Encourage parental involvement • Remove barriers which impede academic and life success • Provide information and appropriate referral sources • Provide management activities that establish, maintain and enhance the program including: research, evaluation, programming, supervision, staff training and development and communication

  24. ASCA National Model

  25. Comprehensive SC Program Components Section 1. Foundation • Cover • Beliefs • Mission • K-12 Group identified standards- local, state, national • School Board signed approval letter

  26. Section 2. Delivery of Services Create narrative statements of how services will be delivered to: • Individuals • Groups • And classrooms

  27. Time Task Analysis Pie Chart

  28. Delivery System Components Guidance Curriculum Individual Student Planning Responsive Services System Support Elem.% MS % HS% 35-45 25-35 15-25 5-10 15-25 25-35 30-40 30-40 25-35 10-15 10-15 15-20 Sample Distribution of Time

  29. Section 3. Management • Action Plan-organization that manages the program • Calendar overview of activities • Agreement of counselor activities • Evaluation of student success • Advisory Council

  30. Local Needs Assessment Activity • Counselor group selects standards for K-12 program in each of the 3 domains • Create survey for students, parents, and staff to help identify the level of importance of those standards for them • Plan the method of processing the results

  31. Action Plan • Guidance lesson content • Domain and Parameter of Essential Instruction Standard • Description of activity • Grade and timeline for completion of activity • Person (s) responsible for delivery • Evaluation methods: pre-post tests, demonstration of competency or product

  32. Section 4. Accountability • Identify data to be collected and the purpose it will serve • Results Reports • Program audit-determine strengths of program and items in need of strengthening

  33. School Counselor Accountability: A MEASURE of student success MEASURE developed by Carol Dahir, Ed.D • Mission-connect your mission to the school’s mission • Element-What critical element are you trying to impact? • Analyze-the data element(%, raw scores, aggregate, disaggregate)

  34. A MEASURE of Student Success • Stakeholders-unite to develop strategies to impact the data element • Results-Restate you baseline data. State where your data is now. Did you meet your goal? What strategies has a positive effect? Which strategies should be changed? • Educate-Educate others to your efforts. Show how the work of the school counselor is connected to the school mission.

  35. Appendix Include items the K-12 group will use such as • Code of ethics • Confidentiality • Forms • Resources

  36. Benefits for Students • Guarantees every student receives the benefit of guidance services. • Ensures equitable access to educational opportunities. • Increases the opportunity for counselor-student interaction.

  37. Benefits for Counselors • Provides a clearly defined role that is related to student achievement. • Supports guidance as an integral component of the total school program. • Provides a tool for program management and accountability.

  38. Benefit to Teachers • Promotes teaming to increase student achievement • Supports the learning environment • Increases collaboration with counselors and teachers

  39. Benefits for Administrators • Creates a structured program with specific guidance content. • Provides a means for measuring effectiveness of guidance programs. • Enhances community image of the guidance program.

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