Title: Accessing Spirituality in the Classroom
1Accessing Spirituality in the Classroom
- Bill McHenry, PhD, NCC, LPC
- Assistant Professor, Counseling
- Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania
2The question is not really whether or not
spirituality will impact our classroom. Instead,
the choice is how effectively we will utilize it
with our students. Mosak and Dreikers suggest
that for many, existential questions anchored in
spirituality are some of the most important
questions they will face (2000).
3The effect of discussing spiritual issues on some
clients
- Can provide the opportunity for discussion of
untapped resources (McGee, Nagel Moore, 2003). - A client who has suicidal thoughts may not
attempt based on religious/spiritual convictions.
Such information and awareness may be of great
use for a clinician. - Can provide the counselor-client relationship
with a stronger sense of we can discuss anything
in here (Souza, 1999). - A client who may be in fear of how the counselor
may view his/her beliefs may have less trust in
the relationship if spirituality is not
addressed.
4The effect of discussing spiritual issues on some
clients
- Can normalize the experience of increased
spiritual awareness as a result of a major life
crisis. - The client may, after a traumatic event such as
the death of a partner, become aware of his/her
increased level of spirituality - Can open up the discussion about
religion/spirituality (Souza, 1999). - A client who may have had trepidation regarding
discussing beliefs may gain awareness of their
value in the counseling process.
5In the classroom, counselor educators
- Can provide the room for open discussions about
spirituality - Can promote the honoring, valuing and discussing
of differences - Can model respect for differences
- Can disclose their own religious/spiritual
beliefs - Can openly discuss ethical guidelines pertaining
to spiritual/religious issues in counseling
6In the classroom, counselor educators
- Need to understand and value that spiritual
beliefs are usually held quite firmly by students - Changing or even slightly altering such beliefs
may be well beyond the classroom experience - Need to understand that these classroom
conversations are not typical discussions, and
thus must be handled with great care - When moments surface regarding spiritual issues
(whether by chance or engineered by the
professor), it is important to remember that most
people do not have such discussions on a regular
basis. Some of the comments and discussion
surfaced in class may be thoughts and questions
from 200 a.m., when the student couldnt sleep.
7In the classroom, counselor educators
- Need to understand their own beliefs and how they
might influence the discussion of spirituality - Presenting ones beliefs in an open and
transparent way will model for students how to
effectively work with clients in a similar
fashion.
8In the classroom, counselor educators should be
aware of
- Students who are unwilling to share.
- Students who are willing to preach their sermon
to the class. - Students who have decided that spirituality is
not something they are willing to discuss with
clients.
9Encouraging spiritual discussions in the classroom
- In orientation class, discussing how the
intersection of theory and practice evolves
through the program, but is anchored in personal
beliefs of the counselor (Polanski, 2002). - The opportunity to discuss student beliefs about
spirituality fits well in this discussion. - In diversity/multicultural class, discuss how
various populations, and individuals within
cultures hold diverse spiritual/religious views
(Polanski, 2002). - The opportunity to discuss both the students and
others views of spirituality can allow for
addressing respect for differences.
10Encouraging spiritual discussions in the classroom
- In clinical courses (fields, practicum,
pre-practicum, etc.) utilize moments during
counseling sessions when opportunities arise for
discussion of spirituality or religiosity. - In assessment class, present assessment materials
related to spirituality/religious beliefs to
enable discussion of how such factors can be used
in the counseling process (i.e., Spiritual
Assessment Scale subscales include meaning of
life, inner resources, interconnectedness and
transcendence).
11Encouraging spiritual discussions in the classroom
- In theories class, discuss the ramifications of
spiritual beliefs in conjunction with the major
theories proposed and the fact that such beliefs
will impact the individual counselors personal
theory of change (Polanski, 2002). - Perhaps discuss social interest as having a
spiritual cosmic connotation - In marriage and family courses discuss how
familial patterns and rules promote certain
religious/spiritual beliefs and how these beliefs
impact personal and family relationships - Perhaps show this through a genogram targeting
spiritual/religious beliefs across generations
12References
- McGee, M., Nagel, L. Moore, M.K. (2003). A
study of university classroom strategies aimed at
increasing spiritual health. College Student
Journal, 37(4). - Mosak, H. Dreikers, R. (2000). Spirituality
The fifth life task. The Journal of Individual
Psychology, 56 (3). - Polanski, P.J. (2002). Exploring spiritual
beliefs in relation to Adlerian theory.
Counseling and Values, 46(1). - Souza, K.Z. (1999). A review of spirituality in
counselor education. New Orleans, LA Association
for Counselor Education and Supervision National
Conference. (Eric Document Reproduction Service
No. ED436689).