School Counseling Program
SCHOOL COUNSELING PROGRAM
Counseling and Human Services Department
University of Scranton
| LeeAnn M. Eschbach, Ph.D., NCC, LPC Co-Director, School Counseling Program 570-941-6299 |
Kevin Wilkerson, Ph.D., NCC, ACS Co-Director, School Counseling Program 570-941-6649 |
School counselors provide professional services aimed at meeting the academic, career, and personal/social needs of school students. The School Counseling Program prepares students for entry into elementary, middle, and secondary school counseling positions.
OUR MISSION STATEMENT
Guided by a team effort and a vision of educational equity, the School Counseling Program trains students to contextualize their counseling competencies by developing skills in leadership, advocacy, and collaboration, and to develop an appreciation of diversity in meeting the varied needs of school students. As a member of a team with other school personnel and helping professionals, school counselors assist students to achieve academic success, choose appropriate career paths, make effective decisions, and develop personally and socially.
OUR SCHOOL COUNSELING PROGRAM
- The American School Counseling Association (ASCA)
- The Education Trust’s National Center for Transforming School Counseling (NCTSC)
- The National Center for School Counseling Outcome Research (CSCOR)
- Pennsylvania School Counselors Association (PSCA)
Each organization strongly adheres to the position that professionals in this
field can best facilitate academic, career and personal/social development among
students by acting as leaders, advocates, collaborators, and visionaries for
systemic change. Trainees in the University of Scranton’s program are taught to
pay particular attention to access and equity issues that create educational
gaps between student groups. The four elements of the ASCA National Model
(Foundation, Delivery System, Program Management, and Accountability) are
infused throughout the curriculum. Emphasis is also placed on the
American School Counseling Association’s Code of Ethics.
Program faculty are advocates for comprehensive services that are appropriate
and relevant for all students in schools, not just those with existing problems
or in crisis, and they promote the use of developmental perspectives by school
counselors. The school counseling faculty are National Trainers for the
Education Trust’s Transforming School Counseling Initiative and are members of
state boards for counseling policy issues. The School Counseling Program
prepares graduates to conceptualize and implement comprehensive school
counseling programs around the eight goals that characterize developmental
counseling: understanding school environments, understanding self and others,
understanding students’ attitudes and behaviors, understanding students’
decision-making and problem solving skills, exercising effective interpersonal
and communication skills, understanding student success skills, understanding
students’ career awareness and educational planning, and understanding community
pride and involvement.
Our 48-credit program leads to a master’s degree (M.S.) in counseling. Graduates
of our programs are eligible for Pennsylvania Department of Education
certification as Elementary School Counselors (K-6) or Secondary School
Counselors (7-12). Students interested in dual certification may complete
additional coursework. The programs are a part of the teacher-education unit at
The University of Scranton. The teacher-education unit also consists of the
Education Department and the Teacher Education Committee. The
National Council for
Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) and the
Pennsylvania Department of Education accredit the teacher education units at
the University of Scranton. The School Counseling Program is also nationally
accredited by the
Council for
the Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP).
Students completing the program are eligible to sit for the National Counselor
Exam (NCE) sponsored by the National
Board for Certified Counselors (NBCC).
THE SCHOOL COUNSELING PROFESSION
As in the other areas of professional counseling, employment opportunities for school counselors are projected to grow comparable to other occupations through 2016 according to the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Outlook Handbook (OOH). The OOH projects 33,000 school counseling employment opportunities through 2016. School Counseling is noted as having the largest number of projected employment opportunities of all specialty areas of professional counseling practice.



