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Models for Comprehensive School Counseling Programs

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1 Models for Comprehensive School Counseling Programs
Chapter 4 By: Lisa Lipins

2 Background Jesse B. Davis was the first person to develop a planned, systematic high school guidance program. Program was aimed at facilitating educational and career planning. He was a teacher-counselor at Central High School in Detroit, Michigan from

3 The Essential Services Model
First model of school counseling Traced to the 1920’s E.G. Williamson published How to Counsel Students: A Manual of Techniques for Clinical Counseling in 1939 Typical Services: Counseling, educational and occupational information, student appraisal, and placement

4 Schmidt’s Essential Services Model Update (2003)
Major components of the school counseling program Personal-Social, Educational, and Career Development Counseling (Individual, Group, Parent, Teacher), Consulting, Coordinating, Appraising Problems with model Suggests that counselors do not have a major role in providing classroom guidance Does not account for all the counselors’ activities throughout the day Falls short of being organized Schmidt outline’s the process of a comprehensive model program as planning, organizing, implementing, and evaluating.

5 The Comprehensive Guidance Program Model (CGPM)
1969 Gysbers and Associates- nontraditional approach Four components: Individual Planning- 1-on-1, small group, classroom Responsive Services-immediate needs, crisis counseling Guidance Curriculum System Support- public relations, professional development, advisory board

6 CGPM Pro’s Con’s Carefully drawn and detailed Prescriptive model
Components are broad, independent Components do not recognize that counselors perform a variety of functions Provides little assistance for those who can’t implement the model due to lack of resources Comprehensive Guidance Program Model Prescriptive Model- can be applied to all 92,000 U.S. Districts Components- broad enough that most counselors’ activities in a school program can be placed under them.

7 ASCA National Model

8 ASCA Model Disconnects between ASCA National Model and CGPM
Management activities seem misplaced in the ASCA National Model Accountability is part of system support in CGPM model but placed in a separate component in the ASCA model

9 Strategic Comprehensive Model (SCM)
Based on meeting students needs No prescribed role or activities Accountability is based on the premise that student’s needs have been met 3 objectives: Development, Prevention, Remediation

10 SCM’s 5 Components Facilitating Normal Development- prevention and development Serving At-Risk Students-remedial services and referral Life Skills Development-goal setting & planning, educational development, career development Leadership and Program Management-personnel evaluation, public relations, planning School Citizenship-varies with school

11 Comprehensive School Counseling Programs
All models stress the importance of using data Students who attended schools with more fully implemented comprehensive school counseling programs reported: higher grades schools were better prepared for the future students felt safer in school had a better relationship with their teachers One program does not meet the needs of all schools or all counselors


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