Assignment title: Information
SCHOOL COUNSELING COLLABORATIVE MODEL INSTRUCTIONS
You will develop a framework for a School Counseling Collaborative Model as the culminating
benchmark assignment for this course, which will integrate learning across all course modules. This is
a detailed model that will take considerable time, so you should get started right away and work on
this assignment throughout the course.
As you already know, the ASCA National Model is a comprehensive school counseling program
model. Imagine that you entered a school where the principal requests that you create a school
counseling program that is "collaborative" because he (or she) wants you to team with all
stakeholders. Since the ASCA National Model is built upon the skills and attitudes of leadership,
advocacy, and collaboration, this is the model that you will want to use as the backbone of your
model. So, in essence, think of your model as "the ASCA National COLLABORATIVE Model",
ensuring that your framework is inclusive of the ASCA Model components, but focusing even more on
collaboration. Component #1 of the rubric sets the stage for this.
Allow you text book and ASCA Handbook to guide your responses to each component of the rubric. In
the end, you will have the makings of a collaborative model because the content and processes will
be outlined by answering the rubric questions.
The template headings are IDENTICAL to the rubric component headings in title and sequence.
Following the the rubric components ensures that you stay focused on the rubric and what is being
requested for the assignment. It also aids your instructor in locating the information to ensure it has
been covered and you receive credit for covering the required assignment elements.
Textbooks: Erford, B. T. (2015). Transforming the school counseling profession (4th ed.). Boston, MA:
Pearson. ISBN: 9780133351897.
American School Counselor Association (2012).ASCA national model: A framework for school
counseling programs (3rd ed.). Alexandria, VA: Author. ISBN: 9781929289325.
Part 1: Professional Identity
1) Grounded in knowledge of history and trends in the profession, student describes roles and
functions of the contemporary professional school counselor in relation to others within and outside of
the school in planning and implementing a collaborative model for school counseling.
2) Student demonstrates an understanding of professional credentials, associations, organizations,
preparation standards, and the ASCA National Model in advocating for an appropriate professional
identity and collaborative program.
3) Student uses specific examples to illustrate the components listed above.
Part 2: Consultation and Collaboration
1) Student describes how consultation and collaboration is used in working with other in the school,
community, and family to promote student personal-social, career, and academic development and
identifies community resources to aid students and families toward this end. Attach a Word file with a
list of 10 resources with contact information to this component in the LiveText Template).
2) Student identifies and describes models of consultation and approaches to collaboration (at least
two of each) and identifies the approach used to create their collaborative model for school
counseling.
3) Student compares and contrasts consultation and collaboration.
Part 3: Systems- and Academic-Focused
1) Student describes their role as a systems change agent, how this collaborative model aligns with
the academic- and systems-focused paradigm for school counseling, identifying strategies for closing
the achievement gap and preventing dropping out of school.
2) Student describes specific strategies, programs, and approaches to engage and empower parents
and teachers toward the personal-social, career, and academic development on their child(ren) and
includes as example of one of these programs by attaching it as a PowerPoint file in this component
of the LiveText template.
3) Student discusses the personal significance of this component to future work as a professional
school counselor.
Part 4: Advocacy and Leadership
1) Student describes how advocacy and leadership is to be used in this model to promote student
learning, social justice, equity, access, attainment, and systemic change, and to empower self-
advocacy. Student gives an example of how barriers will be assessed and identifies the advocacy
processes and/or changes to educational policy, programs, and practices needed to remove the
barrier(s) presented in their example.
2) Student describes characteristics and styles of effective leadership including team building within
and outside of the school that promotes student learning. Student briefly identifies the functions of
student assistance programs, curriculum, and advisory councils.
3) Student identifies the personal attributes held by school counselors that may be helpful in
leadership and advocacy.
Part 5: Ethical and Legal
1) Student identifies legal and ethical (identify specific ethical standards of ASCA and AACC) issues
associated with cases related to: a) student expressing suicide ideation, b) suspected child
abuse/neglect, and c) incidents of bullying/cyber-bullying. Student provides an example of the use of
referral in one of these instances.
2) Student briefly identifies actions he or she plan to take as a part of the collaborative school
counseling model in cases of: a) student expresses suicide ideation, b) suspected child
abuse/neglect, and c) incident of bullying/cyber-bullying.
3) Student identifies potential issues he or she may experience when faced with issues noted above.
Part 6: Multicultural
1) Student identifies how this collaborative model uses individual, group, family, and community
strategies and multicultural competencies to advocate for diverse populations.
2) Student describes how issues of conflict, bias, prejudice, oppression, and discrimination are to be
addressed in this collaborative model, and how the models promotes a positive, caring, and safe
learning environment. Student identifies strategies to developing one's own cultural self-awareness
and competence.
3) Student shares reflections on the significance of multicultural sensitivity to his or her work as a
professional school counselor.