Education News Autumn2017web (2) | Page 13

Reconceptualizing the role of high school counsellors A TEACHER-COUNSELLOR-RESEARCHER PROFILE care. Counsellors did not perceive tension in supporting students for post-secondary or other academic assistance. Implications for future research were identified, which may further reveal the work of high school counsellors, work that may be frequently clandestine to school stakeholders because of the confidential nature of the school counsellor’s role. What prompted the topic of your dissertation Sharlene? Dr. Sharlene McGowan recently superannuated as a teacher and high school counsellor, having spent 31 years in the K -12 public education sector. She is currently a sessional lecturer for the University of Regina and First Nations University of Canada as well as a mental health therapist for Homewood Health. Sharlene worked on her doctoral research while she was a full-time teacher and counsellor. Her successfully defended doctoral dissertation is the result of persistence and the support of her husband, Thomas Scott-McGowan, and other family members as well as her co- supervisors and doctoral committee. Research abstract Sharlene designed her doctoral research to acquire authentic data about the roles of practicing high school counsellors. Through a qualitative collective case study design, twelve practicing high school counsellors were interviewed about their perceptions of their role. Using open and axial coding, data were thematically reported and analyzed and were embedded in three conceptual frameworks: an interpretivist approach, elements of Durkheim’s structural functionalism, and principles of grounded theory. The results demonstrated that school counsellors perceived tension in 10 of 11 thematic topics: advocacy practices, role ambiguity, the overwhelming demands placed upon them, their work as front-line mental health workers, parental communication, the unpredictability of their work day, collaborative practices, their support of school staff, involvement in crisis, and self- As a high school counsellor, I puzzled about the anachronistic discourse of guidance counsellor. I felt the role had transformed considerably in the past decades to become a demanding role that is characterized by complexities, tension, and ambiguity, which were no longer reflected in the former discourse. The clandestine nature of the role pushes understandings of the role by the educational establishment further into obscurity. Secondly, I wondered if high school counsellors in Canada function as social justice advocates for or with students, a role which is represented by an enormous body of American research but is under-researched in Canada. How has your research helped you in your professional role? It helped to widen my vision insofar as grounding my own experience and the experiences of my research participants in the academic discourse related to the role of high school counsellor. My research also helped me to consider that school counsellors may be embedded in the social structure of the school and therefore players in the rituals and status quo of the larger systemic ecology and its competing complexities. What do you hope your research might accomplish within the educational context? I hope my research may spark conversations within the educational establishment that the role of high school counsellor should be reconceptualized to reflect a truer understanding of the role. Rather than being a marginalized extravagance to support the school’s function as an institution for teaching and learning, I would like to have it acknowledged that high school counsellors are integral to supporting students in several key areas, most notably in their mental health needs. Counsellors are vital liaisons between students and their parents or guardians as well as agencies external to the school. Finally, high school counsellors have the capacity to serve as social justice advocates for or with students in the face of systemic inequities. A salient excerpt from Sharlene's dissertation “Present-day counsellors feel conflicted about their role and are frequently at odds with the demands placed upon them by their administrators, colleagues, and even by students’ parents. Within the school and systemic structures in which they must work, counsellors feel torn between their role as employees and their role as advocates for and with students, specifically when both roles seem to have opposing interests. One significant finding from this research was that high school counsellors are front-line mental health workers in the lives of students and assist during times of crisis. They save student lives through routine suicide interventions. This study has demonstrated that the current roles of high school counsellors are considerably different from the historical construction of vocational and personal guidance counsellors. What has emerged from this study is the need to critically reconceptualise the role of the contemporary counsellor and to have the complexity and tensions of these roles acknowledged, understood, and appreciated by the educational establishment.” Date of defence: August 2, 2017 Supervisor/s: Drs. James McNinch and JoLee Sasakamoose Committee: Drs. Donalda Halabuza, Val Mulholland, and Larry Steeves External examiner: Dr. Natalee Popadiuk, University of Victoria Education News | Page 13