Title: Group Counseling Addressing Barriers to Success
1Group CounselingAddressing Barriers to Success
- Helping Students to Help Themselves
- Cynthia L. Martin, LPC, Ed.S.
- Professional School Counselor in Training
- Oak Park High School
- Kansas City, MO
2Oak Park High School
- Mission Statement
- To establish successful learning experiences for
all and create responsible citizens capable of
lifelong learning accomplishments.
3The School Counselors Believe
-
- All students have the ability to achieve.
- All students have the right to be part of the
school counseling program. - All students' needs, abilities, learning styles,
goals, and interests are considered when
developing and implementing the school counseling
program. - All students K-12 shall have access to a
full-time, state certified, Masters' degree level
school counselor to deliver the school counseling
program. -
4And that all school counselors
- Be evaluated by a counseling supervisor on
specified goals and agreed upon student
competencies. - Actively involve counseling team members and
other school personnel to monitor students'
results. - Abide by the professional school counseling
ethics as advocated by the American School
Counseling Association. - Participate in professional development
activities essential to maintaining a quality
school counseling program.
5 The school counseling program should
- Reflect the ASCA National Standards and the
Standards for School Counseling Programs - Be based on the three domains academic, career
and personal/social counseling. - Be planned and coordinated by the school
counseling staff in coordination with other
school personnel. - Utilize community resources to deliver programs.
- Use data to drive program development and
evaluation.
6Cynthia Martins School Counselor Philosophy
- Â
- Â Â Â Â I believe that all students can attain
success with pride and dignity building on the
foundation of their strengths. I believe that all
students have strengths. However, I also believe
not all students recognize their strengths. My
task as a professional school counselor is to
assist in recognizing and maximizing those
strengths and minimizing barriers to success in
the areas of academic, career, and
personal/social domains. I will accomplish this
by functioning in a culturally sensitive manner
as the link between administrators, teachers,
parents, students, and community. This connection
of all vested parties involved in a comprehensive
counseling program will ensure that this
assistance is available in an age-appropriate
manner to every student. -     To meet the needs of a large multicultural,
diverse population of developmentally varied
students, I will utilize Reality therapy in both
individual and group counseling. Although I am
convinced that our past experiences and
relationships have shaped us into the people we
are today, revisiting these events and
relationships in the school environment is
non-productive. Focusing on the here and now
liberates students from poor choices theyve made
in the past. This liberation provides them the
opportunity to determine their future decisions
unfettered by a feeling of failure. Through
Reality therapy students are enlightened and
empowered when they understand that their future
is theirs to mold, that decisions they make today
shape their tomorrows.  -     I believe that by following the Missouri
Comprehensive Guidance Program model I will be
able to provide guidance and counseling through
guidance curriculum. I will encourage student
growth and development, model and teach effective
communication and thereby strengthen
interpersonal relationships. I will utilize
assessment strategies where needed and include
consultation as one of my standard behaviors.Â
Acknowledgement and appreciation of cultural
diversity will aid in my effectiveness. I
believe that I am guided by ethical standards
as directed by the American School Counselor
Association, the American Counseling Association,
and my personal set of standards. Â To this end, I
believe that it is the responsibility of each
professional school counselor to manage and
maintain the guidance program.
7Purpose of the Intervention
- This intervention was used for the purpose of
addressing issues that were presenting a barrier
to success for students. Small group sessions
were conducted on a weekly basis. During each
session students were encouraged to identify
their triggers for problematic behaviors and to
determine and implement alternative behaviors.
8SIMSStudents, Interventions, Measurements,
Settings
- Students 9th-12th grade students
- Intervention Small group counseling addressing
issues that were creating a barrier to student
success. - Measures Pre- and post-test results were
compared for each student. - Setting The Anger Group was held in the
Counseling Center Conference room. The Substance
Abuse Group met in a private room in the media
center.
9Identification of StudentsA survey was
distributed to the student body.
- ID____________
- PERSONAL CONFIDENTIAL
- Please check the boxes for any groups that
interest you. - __Divorce Survival Group
- __Parenting and Pregnant Teens
- __Dealing with the imprisonment of a parent or
family member - __How do I deal with all the chaos and drama in
my family? - __Homeless-kicked out-no place to call home
- __How to manage my anger
- __Dealing with drug and/or alcohol issues in my
life (me or others in my family).
10Needs Survey Results
11Procedure
- Step one was to identify by Student ID number
those students who reported being depressed and
suicidal. I immediately reported them to their
individual counselors and appropriate steps were
taken by those counselors. Those two students
were not candidates for any group. - I then looked at the largest numbers as reported
by the students. Drama and chaos in my home
ranked as 1. However, upon reflection, that
category wasnt specific enough for time-limited
small group counseling to effectively address.
The school social worker was forming a parenting
group and addressing homeless issues. Therefore,
I chose Prison, Anger, and Substance Abuse as
possible groups for me to facilitate.
12Procedure, continued
- I located the students by identifying them by
their Student ID numbers and referred to their
individual schedules. - I went to their classrooms and spoke with each
individual (in the hall, for privacy) regarding
their desire to participate in group counseling
and pre-screened them for the appropriateness of
the modality, based on their expressed needs.
13The Participants
- The students in the groups were
- self-reported to be having problems, or
- referred by their counselor, or
- referred by an Assistant Principal
- The students regular counselors specified
several students who were not appropriate for a
group intervention and they were eliminated from
the pool. - The facilitator met individually with the
students to determine if the group would address
the students problem. - Although I designed three groups, I only ran two
of them. The prison group didnt make because
parental permission was denied for those
students.
14Psychoeducational Group Counseling
- A psychoeducational group is focused on educating
the members about their issues. - The group setting provides a safe place to
experiment with adaptive, as opposed to
maladaptive, coping mechanisms. - These kinds of groups are structured group
members are provided with specific topics or
modules to discuss and learn about.
15Group GoalsThe group goals were negotiated and
established by the members of each group with
some guidance from the counselor. These may
differ somewhat from the counselor goals.
- Group members will be able to identify and share
feelings associated with their issues. - Group members will be able to discuss experiences
related to having an inappropriate reaction
(e.g. anger - loss of control Dad/Mom drinks
Im to blame). - Group members will interact with each other,
listen to each other, and provide respectful
feedback to one another. - Group members will develop new coping strategies
for troubling situations. - Group members will develop a support system among
themselves.
16Anger and Substance Abuse Pre-Post Tests
- Do you believe no one could possibly understand
how you feel? - Do you cover up your real feelings by pretending
you dont care? - Do you feel nobody really loves you or cares what
happens to you? - Do you tell lies to cover up for whats really
happening in your life? - Do you stay out of the house as much as possible
because you hate it there? - Are you afraid or embarrassed someone will find
out whats going on? - Do you make promises to others you know you wont
keep? - Do you think all your problems would be solved if
this one issue were resolved? - Has this issue affected how you feel about
yourself? - Do you ever treat people (teachers, schoolmates,
friends, etc.) unjustly because you are angry at
someone else? - I used the same pre/post test for both groups.
The possible answers were 1 to 5 on a Likert
scale with 1 indicating no agreement and 5
indicating complete agreement. The highest
possible score on this would be 50 if all 10
questions were answered with complete agreement.
17Counselor Goals
- Despite using the same test, my goals for the
groups were diametrically opposed. -
- In the Anger group my goal was to see the total
scores go up. This would indicate that the
participants are becoming more aware of their
emotions and are claiming ownership of them,
rather than blaming others for their emotional
state. - For the Substance Abuse group my goal was to see
the total scores go down. This would indicate
that the participants are individuating
themselves and leaving the responsibility for the
substance abuse to the abusers.
18Pre/Post Test Results
Students Pre-Test Post-test Improvement Counselor Goal
Stan 18 23 28
Ralph 17 24 41
Helen 25 30 20
Students Pre-Test Post-test Improvement Counselor Goal
Janice 34 27 26
Bill 21 16 31
19Conclusions
- Short-term group counseling can produce change.
- The psychoeducational format is a good fit in the
school environment. - All change that occurred was moving the students
toward improved functioning. - Scheduling the group meetings in school was the
most difficult part of running the groups. - As a result of the groups and the improvement in
their functioning, the group members are talking
it up to their friends and to faculty.
20Summation
- Although the expressed need was great, the number
of actual participants was very low. I was
informed that this school had never before had a
group counseling program. However, the project
surveys clearly demonstrated a need for and
interest in this type of intervention. - As I have shown, all change was change for the
better. Hopefully, the insight these students
gained in group counseling will allow continued
improvement in their functioning and hope for
their futures.