Title: Assessment in counseling centers
1Assessment in counseling centers
- Sherry A. Benton, Ph.D., ABPP
2Our Mission
- The Mission of university counseling centers is
to assist students to define and accomplish
personal, academic, and career goals by providing
developmental, preventive, and remedial
counseling. - Counsel for the Advancement of Standards in
Higher Education (1999). - The counseling center serves the academic mission
of the university.
3Traditional Counseling Center Roles
- Developmental
- Career
- Preventive
- Multicultural and Gender
- Mental health
4Changes in Student-Institution Relationship
- In Loco Parentis
- Rights and Freedom
- Contractual Relationship
- Student as Consumer
Since the mid 1990s, Greater public scrutiny of
colleges, greater public expectation that they
will regulate and manage campus problems.
5Changes in University Administrative Needs
- Tighter budgets
- University liability and lawsuits
- More demand from the public for accountability,
outcomes - Accountability demands from regional accrediting
bodies - Student/ family requests for accountability
6Changes in Families and Communications. In
1975, communication was once per week, in 2008
communication is daily.
Helicopter parents seem to view their children as
construction projects. They hover, monitoring
every aspect of their students experience.
7Changes in Counseling Center Service Demands
- More students using services
- More problem severity, higher problem prevalence
- More diverse student population
8Changes in Prevalence of Mental Health Problems
among students
Suicidal Ideation and Intent
Benton, et al. 2003
9Future Directions for Counseling Centers
- Prevention and outreach are more important than
ever - Increase accessibility, decrease silo effect
through on-line resources, campus-wide education
efforts - Improve problem assessment and outcome assessment
to insure that services are best meeting student
needs - Decrease stigma, recognize students with mental
health needs as a critical diversity initiative - Train faculty and staff to recognize, respond,
and refer
10The Age of Accountability
- Medical Practice Guidelines
- QA and UR
- In industry, Lean Manufacturing
- In Education, No Child Left Behind
- Outcome assessment in higher education
- EBTs, ESTs, EVTs in mental health
Demands to demonstrate our worth are not going to
go away.
11Evaluation Apprehension and Ambivalence
- What have been your worst experiences of
evaluation? - How do you informally and formally evaluate your
outcomes now? How do you know you are effective? - What are the advantages and disadvantages of
doing outcome assessment? - What are the possible consequences of avoiding
assessing outcomes?
12Two models of evaluating psychotherapy outcomes
- The Medical Model
- Adherents believe that general effects exist,
but find these relatively unimportant the
therapeutic effect is primarily a result of the
specific ingredients. - The Contextual Model
- Adherents believe that common factors across
psychotherapy models account for most of the
therapeutic effect and specific ingredients are
relatively unimportant. -
13The Medical Model
- Efficacy of psychotherapy varies by theory and
technique - Clinical trials benchmarking studies
- used to identify ESTs and practice guidelines
- Manualized treatments
- General effects lt specific effects
- Adherence is critical, allegiance is unimportant
- Treatment effects gt Therapist effects
14Proponents claim
- Effective manuals create a structure integrating
therapeutic techniques and common factors - Clarifies understanding between researchers,
clinical trials and practitioners. - Decreases liability
- May increase efficacy and therapist job
satisfaction - Improves client outcomes
- Increases therapist confidence regardless of
degree of compliance
15Contextual Model
- Common factors account for most of observed
changes in psychotherapy - No evidence of specific effects
- General effects gt Specific Effects
- Adherence unimportant, Allegiance is critical
- Treatment effects lt therapist effects
16Wampolds meta-analysis of client change in
psychotherapy
Specific Effects 8
General Effects 70
Unexplained Variance 22
17 Factors in Client Change
Readiness, reactance Environmental events Client
relationship skills Cultural factors Self-help
Empathy Warmth Genuineness Therapeutic
alliance Collaborative approach
Hope Self-efficacy
EBTs Efficacious Treatment Procedures
Lambert, 1992
18Some case illustrations
- The student who does not neatly fit in a
diagnostic category - The student with cultural and contextual factors
that affect their perceptions and responses to
treatment (wouldnt that be all of the students) - The therapist who chooses untested idiosyncratic
theories and treatments - The therapist who rigidly forces all cases to fit
within one of the EVT manualized treatments, but
attends little to the therapeutic relationship -
19The need for local assessment of problems, needs,
and outcomes
- Only local assessment of problems assures that we
are designing our services to best meet changing
needs - Only local assessment allows us to create problem
and outcome assessment most meaningful to us and
consistent with our values - Only local assessment ensures that our services
are effective and efficient for our students
20Issues in assessing counseling service outcomes
- Problem identification
- Problem severity
- Contextual and cultural considerations
- Readiness
- Reactance
- Well-being, resiliency, optimism
- Multiple services outreach, group, individual
21K-PIRS
Kansas State
Client Intake Assess. Demographic 7
factors Critical factors Readiness Social,
Academic Interference Treatment modality choice
Client Follow-up 3 session intervals 7
factors Critical items Social, Academic
Interference Symptom reduction Goal
attainment Satisfaction
Therapist Intake Assess 7 factors Client
problem, severity Readiness Social, Academic
Interference GAF Treatment modalities
recommended
Therapist Follow-up Revised Case Descriptors 7
factors Social, Academic Interference GAF Symptom
reduction Goal attainment Treatment modalities
used of sessions
Problem incidence in general student population
22Instrument Development
23(No Transcript)
24The kind of questions we can answer
- Characteristics of client problems
- Client- therapist congruence
- Changes and trends across time
- Impact and change during psychotherapy
- Efficacy and outcome of treatment options
- Efficacy of services across client populations
- Impact of services in terms of the academic
mission of the university - Client growth and development
25University of Florida
- What are the evaluation questions we, as a
counseling center would like addressed? - What are the important components of assessment
for our center? - What are the outcomes most important to the
university administration? - What kinds of outcomes might be useful for
demonstrating our value to those who make funding
decisions? - What are some specific outcome instruments that
you would favor exploring towards implementation
at UFCC?