When all children have equal access to quality education.
What is educational equity?
It is the main goal of ................ to get all students college and career ready.
What is the National Office for School Counselor Advocacy?
Aspects of this include high unemployment, higher crimes, lower earnings, and dependency on social services.
What is Lower Educational Achievement?
Aspects of this counseling approach include challenging bias, connecting schools, families and communities, coordinating student services and support are apart of which approach.
What is the Social Justice Approach?
Definition: “A professional relationship that empowers diverse individuals, families, and groups to accomplish mental health, wellness, education and career goals.”
What is "counseling"?
A 2001 mandate used to address inequities existing in US schools.
What is the No Child Left Behind Act?
The ............ standards initiative became the national movement toward preparing all students from high school to being college and career ready.
What is Common Core?
Teachers run the risk of the adding to the achievement gap by...
What is setting low educational expectations for Black and Latino students?
A practice of school counselors and educators that focuses on the students' strengths, rather than their deficits.
What is equity?
Which is not a condition as to which guidance and counseling gave growth in the United States during the 20th century?
a) Growth of technology
b) Growth of pop culture
c) The extension of vocational education
d) The spread of modern forms of democracy
Objectives that identify what all students should know or be able to do as a result of academic course work.
What are standards?
A transformed school counselor, while addressing the needs of individual students, will also have an eye on .......... and ...........
What are institutional policies and practices that impede student progress?
To have cultural knowledge, awareness, and skills to work with diverse groups.
What is cultural competence?
The social justice approach function that allows the counselor to meet with the student’s parents and teachers to address issues that are preventing the student from having success without the student being present.
What is consultation?
"Serve as a leader and an assertive advocate for students, consultants to families and educators, team members to teachers, administrators and other school personnel to help aid in a student’s success."
What is the role of a school counselor?
1. Counseling
2. Consultation
3. Coordination
What are the former 3 C’s of school counseling?
1. Inequities in the education system
2. Changes in the nations demographics and school population
3. Changes in the economy and the workplace
4. Major changes in educational public policy
What are the four forces driving change in schools?
High expectations for students, parent and community involvement, and purposeful and proactive leadership.
What are ways to closing the achievement gap?
This focuses on impartiality and retaining policies without regard to student differences or unique circumstances.
What is equality?
Who is known as the “father of vocational guidance”?
a) Jesse B. Davis
b) George Merrill
c) Frank Parsons
d) Eli W. Weaver
1. Program Foundation
2. Delivery
3. Management
4. Accountability
What are the 4 core mechanisms for student success?
When professional school counselors provide ongoing systemic activities designed to assist students in individually determining student goals and developing plans for their future.
What is individual student planning?
This is the most glaring gap in student achievement, nationally and locally.
What is the gap among races?
This is the manner in which an oppressed group ironically comes to use against itself the methods of the oppressor.
What is internalized oppression?
The year that New York become the first state to have full time guidance personnel in the Department of Education, providing leadership to school systems for the integration of professional school counselors in schools.
a) 1926
b) 1932
c) 1929
d) 1942