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The “NEW” Wisconsin Comprehensive School Counseling Model

The “NEW” Wisconsin Comprehensive School Counseling Model. From Theory to Application. School Counseling. Gary L. Spear, Ed.S Consultant - School Counseling Programs WI Department of Public Instruction P.O. Box 7841 Madison, WI 53707-7841 ph: 608-266-2820 fax: 608-266-3643

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The “NEW” Wisconsin Comprehensive School Counseling Model

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  1. The “NEW” Wisconsin Comprehensive School Counseling Model From Theory to Application

  2. School Counseling Gary L. Spear, Ed.S Consultant - School Counseling Programs WI Department of Public Instruction P.O. Box 7841 Madison, WI 53707-7841 ph: 608-266-2820 fax: 608-266-3643 Gary.spear@dpi.state.wi.us http://www.dpi.state.wi.us/dpi/dlsea/sspw/counsl1.html

  3. WCSCM – A Shift from: What do counselors do? to How are students different because of the school counseling program? ASCA [2002]

  4. The “ NEW” WCSCM • ASCA National Model • National Consortium for State Guidance Leadership • The Educational Trust: Transforming School Counseling Initiative • National Career Development Guidelines • WDGM • Standard e

  5. WCSCM: Relevance • Wisconsin Covenant • New Wisconsin Promise • Partnership for 21st Century Skills • American Diploma Project • State Superintendent’s High School Task Force Report [High School Redesign] • NCLB • Standard e

  6. WCSCM: Relevance • 21st Century Competencies • Information and communications technology literacy • Critical thinking • Communications • Collaboration • Global awareness • Business, economic, and civic literacy • Top Skills • Professionalism and work ethic • Oral and written communications • Teamwork and collaboration • Critical thinking and problem solving

  7. WCSCM – UnderlyingPrinciples • Serve all students and provide opportunities for all grades K-12. • Curriculum is developed and delivered by counselors, faculty, and community. • Counselors time is calendared among the four components of a comprehensive school counseling program. • Parents are involved and the community helps deliver services. • Curriculum is standards based and competency driven.

  8. Rationale for a Comprehensive School Counseling Program • A comprehensive school counseling program is an integral component of the school’s academic mission. Comprehensive school counseling programs, driven by student data and based on standards in academic, career and personal/social development, promote and enhance the learning process for all students. • ensures equity and access to a rigorous education for all students • identifies the knowledge and skills all students will acquire as a result of the K-12 comprehensive school counseling program • is delivered to all students in a systematic fashion • is based on data-driven decision making • is provided by a state-credentialed school counselor

  9. WCSCM Delivery System • Four Components • School Counseling Curriculum:classroom, curriculum development, group activities, parent workshops • Responsive Services:individual & small groups, crisis, consultations, referrals • Individual Student Planning:individual & small group appraisal or advisement, conferences, learning plans • System Support:professional development, consultation, collaboration, program management

  10. School Counseling Curriculum Career “All Work is Noble” Personal/Social “ Character is Essential” Academic “Learning is Lifelong”

  11. School Counseling Curriculum – Three Domains Academic Domain • Core Content Standards: A, B, C • A: Students will acquire the attitudes, knowledge, and skills that contribute to successful learning in school and across the life span. • B: Students will develop the academic skills and attitudes necessary to make effective transitions from elementary to middle school, from middle school to high school, and from high school to a wide range of postsecondary options • C: Students will understand how their academic experiences prepare them to be successful in the world of work, in their interpersonal relationships, and in the community

  12. School Counseling Curriculum – Three Domains Personal/Social Domain • Core Content Standards: D, E, F • D: Students will acquire the knowledge, attitudes, and interpersonal skills to understand themselves and appreciate the diverse backgrounds and experiences of others. • E: Students will demonstrate effective decision-making, problem-solving, and goal-setting skills. • F: Students will understand and use safety and wellness skills.

  13. School Counseling Curriculum – Three Domains Career Domain • Core Content Standards: G, H, I • G: Students will acquire the self-knowledge necessary to make informed career decisions. • H: Students will understand the relationship between educational achievement and career development. • I: Students will employ career management strategies to achieve future career success and satisfaction.

  14. School Counseling Curriculum:Student Standards • Content Standards • Core Performance Standards • Benchmarks [2, 5, 8, 12] • Content Standard = A • Core Performance = 1 • Benchmark = 5.1.1 Ex. = A.2.3.1, D.8.2.1, I.12.1.1[format under review at DPI]

  15. Individual Planning • Assessment • Advisement • Transition Planning • Accommodations • Individual LearningPlans • Student/ParentConferencing

  16. Responsive Services • Personal Counseling Sessions • Support Group Facilitation • Crisis Response • Coordination, referral and outreach with community agencies

  17. System Support • Public Relations • Community and Parent Involvement • Staff Development • Professional Development • Information Management Services

  18. Calendaring • Program activities are calendared. • Counselor time usage plan is followed. • Use of time is focused on the developmental needs of all students. • Starts on first day of school and ends on last day of school.

  19. Elementary Time

  20. Middle School Time

  21. High School Time

  22. Career Domain • Standard H: Students will understand the relationship between educational achievement and career development. • Core - H.1: Attain educational achievement and performance levels needed to reach personal and career goals. • Benchmark - H.8.1.5: Develop an action plan to enhance educational achievement and attain career goals.

  23. Educational/Career Conference • Individual Learning Plan • Academics – courses, experiences, plans • Extracurricular/Co-curricular • Postsecondary • Occupational/career plans • Goals • Personal strengths and weakness • Obstacles • Curriculum based

  24. Individual Learning Plan • Program Plan of Study • High school courses • Appropriate to career pathway • Required and elective • Postsecondary • High school – youth options or alternative education • College or tech college • Career enhancement • Work-based learning • Training options

  25. Accountability/Evaluation • Program Audit • Needs Survey [pre/post] • Students • Parents • Staff • Community • Counselor Performance • Program Evaluation • Student Progress • Advisory Committee

  26. Impact of Comprehensive School Counseling Program • Increased student achievement K-12 • Increased attendance rates • Increased collaboration between parents, community and school • Increased enrollment in higher level courses and career classes • Increased post-secondary school enrollments • Decreased discipline problems, suspensions, and expulsions • Decreased drop out rate

  27. Elementary Guidance –Academics Hadley [1988] – Elementary guidance activities have a positive impact on student academic achievement Borders & Drury [1992] – School counseling interventions have a substantial impact on student educational development and improved school attendance Boutwell & Myrick [1992] – Counseling programming focused on school success and behaviors related to achievement: 83% showed academic improvement and 76% of those failing improved and passed classes Research on School Counseling Effectiveness

  28. Research on School Counseling Effectiveness • Elementary Guidance – Academics • Lee [1993] – Counselors have a positive impact on student achievement in Math with some improvement in Lang Arts. • Mullis & Otwell [1997] – Counselors can assist teachers in helping improve student academic performance • Sink & Stroh [2003] – Schools with comprehensive school counseling programs produced higher achievement test scores

  29. Research on School Counseling Effectiveness • Middle School Guidance – Academics • Gerler & Kinney [1985] – Underachieving students who received counseling services improved significantly in Math and Lang Arts • Watts & Thomas [1997] – Counselors do impact students academic performance including significant improvement in Lang Arts • Tobias & Myrick [1999] – Counselors demonstrated they could help students improve school grades and attendance • McElroy [2000] – Counselors directly support the schools academic mission • Lapan, Gysbers & Petroski [2001]– Schools implementing a comprehensive school counseling program have students earning higher grades

  30. Research on School Counseling Effectiveness • High School Guidance – Academics • Myrick [1987] – Developmentally-based programs promote student development and academic success. • Borders & Drury [1992] – Effective school counseling programs have a substantial impact on student educational development and improved attendance. • Lapan, Gysbers & Sun [1997] – Schools with more fully implemented comprehensive school counseling programs had students earning higher grades; more career and college information available; students better prepared for the future; more positive school climate; counselors promoting the school’s educational goals.

  31. Research on School Counseling Effectiveness • High School Guidance – Academics • Nelson, Gardner & Fox [1998] – Schools with more fully implemented comprehensive school counseling programs had students who took more advanced math and science courses; took more vocational/technical courses; had higher ACT scores on every scale of the test. • Mau, Hitchcock & Calvert [1998] - Counselors influence students futures by encouraging them to have higher expectations; student self-expectations increased over time. • Kaufman, Klein & Frase [1999] – Counseling services are one of the key elements in dropout prevention programs. • Schlossberg & Morris [2001] – Counselor led developmental guidance units help assist students in coping with theoverwhelming transition to high school.

  32. WCSCM: Delivered By All • Counselor Role: To lead, facilitate, and provide direct services. • Faculty have a role in delivering curriculum. • Community partners in program delivery.

  33. At-risk emphasis Crisis driven “On call” approach Measures amount of effort Attends to process of doing work Focus on good intentions Works to maintain the existing system Talks about how hard they work Owned by the counseling staff Provides to ALL students Curriculum driven Calendared time Measures impact related to goals Attends to goals, objectives and outcomes Focus on accomplishments Changes and adapts to be responsive Talks about effectiveness Community owned and supported From Entitlement … To Performance

  34. Comprehensive School Counseling and ESEA/NCLB • Attendance / Truancy • Alternative programs • Character Education • Conflict Resolution • Counseling • Drop Out Retention • Parent Involvement • Classroom Management • Pupil Services Personnel

  35. How School Counseling Programs Impact Students • As students understand themselves, explore the world around them and establish goals for their futures, they begin to see why an education is important. They no longer attend school simply to receive a diploma or avoid truancy. Instead, students understand the connection between success in school today and success in their careers tomorrow. • Purpose and Direction

  36. Summer Training 2007 June 19 - 22 @ Hayward [CESA 11/12/WITC] July 16 – 19 @ Rice Lake [CESA 11/12/WITC] July 30 – Aug 3 @ Fennimore [CESA 3] Aug 6 – 10 @ Rhinelander [NATC/CESA 9] Aug 13 – 16 @ West Salem [CESA 4]

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