SOAR Graduate Program Student Handbook
1. Getting Started

1.1 Characteristics of the Program


  • A cohort model
  • A 48-credit Master of Education degree in Counselor Education
  • Eligibility for school counselor certification in Florida
  • Skill building in counseling leadership, collaboration, and data-driven decision making
  • Field experiences integrated throughout the coursework
  • Knowledge and understanding of innovative practices in school counseling
  • Expertise in using technology applications in school counseling to support students’ growth and development
  • Extensive knowledge in delivering comprehensive programs that promote success for all students in the areas of academic, career, and personal/social development
  • A unique cross-disciplinary approach through sharing core courses with teacher education, special education, and educational leadership candidates
  • An evening and weekend program with approximately 3 daytime obligations per semester (summer term requires more daytime obligations)


1.2 Diversity


 

Every course in the School Counseling Track addresses the role of social and cultural diversity in school counseling. Students learn about the characteristics, concerns, and needs of diverse groups such as cultural minorities, people with low socioeconomic status, and people with disabilities. Students explore their own attitudes and biases toward various populations and develop strategies to overcome those biases. Students acquire skills in order to provide individual, group, and classroom guidance lessons to diverse populations.  

 

Candidates are required to commit to the self-examination of their own acceptance and celebration of diverse populations. Effectiveness in communicating and working with students, parents, teachers, school administrators, and community members is dependent on the student’s understanding of cultural and ethnic values, beliefs, and customs. Faculty believes that candidates’ understanding and sensitivity to diversity, both within and across cultural and ethnic groups, is simply a necessity, and the program fosters opportunities for growth. Throughout the program, candidates are expected to demonstrate knowledge and understanding in terms of both their own and others’ cultural and ethnic beliefs, values, and mores.

 

The gap in achievement between minority/low SES students and their non-minority/more affluent peers is a root sign of racial, cultural, and educational inequities that result in discrimination, economic disparity, and social stratification. Candidates are selected for admission and groomed during the program to develop a penchant for social justice to see injustice and inequity where it occurs and work with determination to eradicate it.



1.3 Fingerprinting Procedure


 

SOAR graduate students must be fingerprinted by Duval County Public Schools (DCPS) at the DCPS School Board before they can work in any Duval County public school. If already employed by DCPS it is not necessary to be re-fingerprinted. Read below for fingerprinting procedures.

  1. The fingerprinting fee is $81.25.
  2. The SOAR Graduate Assistant will email instructions to students. We receive our instructions from the Office of Field Experience.
  3. Students employed by DCPS must inform the Graduate Assistant that they have been fingerprinted and the date so that this information can be verified.
  4. Following fingerprinting procedures in a timely manner is considered part of our students’ professional demeanor.


1.4 Mission and Vision of the School Counseling Program


 

The School Counseling Program is philosophically aligned with the mission of the College of Education and Human Services (COEHS) and the Duval County Public Schools, the K-12 school district we predominately serve. The school counseling program is cutting-edge with regard to the knowledge and practice that represents the field of school counseling. This document presents the essential framework of elements that describe our program’s knowledge bases and assessment plan, and the integration and articulation of these two components.

Mission

The mission of the School Counseling Program is to prepare culturally competent and skilled school counseling professionals to meet the growing needs of K-12 students in today’s schools. This competency-based school counseling program prepares professional school counselors to deliver comprehensive programs that promote success for all students (preK-12) in the areas of academic, career, and personal/social development. Through advocacy, collaboration, teamwork, leadership, individual and group counseling interventions, and use of data and technology, UNF school counselor candidates will be prepared to support, promote, and enhance student achievement and success in school.

Vision

The School Counseling Program is situated within the Department of Leadership School Counseling, and Sport Management under the auspices of the College of Education and Human Services (COEHS) at the University of North Florida. This program reflects the COEHS vision of preparing and supporting educators who seek to be competent and contributing professionals for diverse learning communities. Professional preparation in School Counseling emphasizes the development of candidates who will model pedagogical effectiveness and engage in active leadership roles within schools and community organizations with regard to school counseling.



1.5 Philosophy of SOAR


 

School Counseling candidates will demonstrate the knowledge and skills to plan, implement, and evaluate comprehensive national standards-based school counselor programs. The School Counseling Track prepares school counselors to fulfill the following roles:

  • serve as advocates, educational leaders, team members, counselors, and consultants to maximize opportunities for every student to succeed academically;
  • develop in students a commitment to achievement and provide conditions that enable students to accomplish their goals;
  • help students recognize their potential and enhance their capacity to make academic and career decisions;
  • serve as leaders and stewards of equity and achievement and be able to remedy institutional and environmental barriers impeding students' progress;
  • provide all students with academic and career advising in order for them to form values, attitudes, and behaviors conducive to their educational and economic success; and,
  • become managers of resources and partnership builders, enlisting the support of parents, agencies, and community members.


1.6 Technology


 

In every course in the school counseling program, students learn to apply current and emerging technologies so that they may learn how to use them to assist students, families, and educators to promote informed academic, career, and personal/social choices. Students use one or more types of multi-media technology (i.e. word processing, PowerPoint, Internet) to complete assignments. All of the PowerPoint presentations throughout the 2-year school counseling program are posted on the Blackboard course so that each student can download their classmates’ Power Points, give credit to their classmates, and tailor the Power Points for their school counseling position. Students are required to perform Internet searches on various topics and submit a significant portion of their work electronically. Likewise, instructors model the use of PowerPoint, the Internet, conference calling, and other technologies to teach the courses.

 

Additionally, students learn to gather critical electronic information, such as school report card data, and employ the power of electronically disaggregated data. Materials for select courses are provided via a web-based course (http://blackboard.unf.edu). Students use a discussion board on this web-course, “Blackboard”, to post comments about topics related to school counseling. In recent years, students have also established websites to assist students, families, and educators in finding and using resources that promote informed academic, career, and personal/social choices. 



1.7 SOAR Faculty


 

   Carolyn Stone, Ed.D.  Professor, School Counseling Program Leader 
   Christopher Janson, Ph.D.   Assistant Professor, School Counseling
   Sophie Maxis, Ph.D.   Assistant Professor, School Counseling
   Rebecca Schumacher, Ed.D.    Assistant Professor, School Counseling