Love this. I hope Rep. Castro is talking with Rep. Lucio III to devise a strategy for how to prevent this knowledge that future competent counselors would gain from being lost in a system that relegates them to testing duties.
-Patricia
by Reeve Hamilton | Texas Tribune
February 1, 2011
State Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, is looking to shake up the way Texas trains, educates and certifies public school counselors.
In a December Texas Tribune article on school counselors, Castro said there were a number of fixable issues — he called it "the low-hanging fruit" — with the state's approach to the profession. This week, he filed a handful of bills addressing those issues.
The first, House Bill 1016, would require that counselor-certification programs specifically address the admissions and financial aid process for higher education. Knowledge of that process is not currently a required component for certification, even though state statute requires high school counselors to provide information on it to students.
"The state has been sending mixed messages to school counselors for years," Castro said in a statement.
HB 1017 and HB 1018 would require schools to notify parents if they do not employ at least one full-time counselor. According to the Legislative Budget Board, that applies to at least 748 campuses in the state.
Finally, HB 1019 would require separate certifications for elementary and secondary counselors. Six states — Delaware, Iowa, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska and Pennsylvania — already have separate certifications. They also have a higher percentage of students that enroll in higher education directly from high school.
Castro says the state's one-size-fits-all certification policy spotlights a key assumption by policy makers "that the duties and responsibilities of an elementary school counselor are the same as those of a high school counselor." He says, "Clearly they are not."
This blog on Texas education contains posts on accountability, testing, K-12 education, postsecondary educational attainment, dropouts, bilingual education, immigration, school finance, environmental issues, Ethnic Studies at state and national levels. It also represents my digital footprint, of life and career, as a community-engaged scholar in the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin.
It costs 1 million dollars to create a new certificate. Unlikely to get new ones this session. But counselors are key individuals in schools, especially to first-generation college-going kids. Not nearly enough attention is paid to what they do. Andrea Venezia (a grad student of mine back in 1997-98) did her dissertation on schools around Austin and found them to be a gate-keeper to college for poor kids.
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