The document discusses the role and responsibilities of teachers as counselors in schools. It begins by outlining the objectives of teacher guidance, which include being aware of the teacher's counseling role and understanding counseling skills. It describes counsel as a gift from God and biblical foundations for counseling. Key aspects of a counselor's role are to follow up on student issues, act as a liaison, build self-esteem, and improve relationships and behavior. For schools without dedicated counselors, teachers and administrators must fill this role. The document provides guidance on social counseling, developing relationships with students, counseling steps and skills, as well as situations to avoid like transference. It emphasizes that counseling requires active listening, objectivity, and referring students
2. SLAC Objectives:
⊠To be aware of teacherâs function as class counselor/guidance
advocates
⊠To orient oneâs self of the attitude, skills and characteristics of
teacher-guidance counselor
⊠To have a deep understanding about counseling and what
counseling is not
3. COUNSEL
⊠One of the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit: wisdom,
understanding, COUNSEL, fortitude, knowledge, piety and
fear of the Lord
⊠Spiritual Works of Mercy: Instruct the ignorant; admonish the
sinner; COUNSEL THE DOUBTFUL; comfort the sorrowful;
bear wrongs patiently, forgive all injuries; and pray for the
living and the dead.
4. BIBLICAL FOUNDATION
âŠWhere there is no guidance, a people falls, but
in an abundance of counselors there is safety.
Proverbs 11:14
âŠWithout counsel plans fail, but with many advisers
they succeed. Proverbs 15:22
5. A CounselorâŠ
âŠis responsible for following up with students
regarding academic or social issues.
âŠacts as a liaison between students, parents, and
teachers, helping them to work together to
help the student succeed socially and
academically.
6. A CounselorâŠ
⊠recognizes the worth and dignity of each
student.
⊠helps students build their self-esteem and
self-confidence, develop better peer
relationships, improve organizational skills,
and improve behavior and anger
management skills.
9. âŠIn DEP ED Laguna there are only few registered
guidance counselors among elementary and
secondary schools.
âŠSchools without enough or ANY counselors
have to be able to rely on teachers and
administrators to identify troubled students.
(ASCA)
10. What Do Teachers Do
Guidance is an integral part of being a teacher!
It is about empowering a student to decide how to
accomplish his/her tasks;
Not solve problems but facilitating the way and
enabling the person to help him/herself.
11. âŠGuidance is assisting the student in making wise
choices, plans and adjustment as he/she faces the
many crisis life holds.
12. Social Counseling
The secret sauce in programs that try to improve
student behavior is relationship
The goal is to get students to feel connected â to their
school, to their classmates and to their teachers.
13. Two-by-Ten Strategy
âŠDeveloped by education professor Raymond
Wlodkowski:
âŠTeachers spend two minutes a day for ten
consecutive days having private conversations with
their most challenging students.
âŠTeachers leave it up to the student to pick the topic,
but may get the ball rolling with a comment or
question such as, âYou seem especially tired today.â
14. âŠTeachers can learn a lot about whatâs going on in the
studentâs life and begin to adjust their thinking.
âŠInstead of seeing students as willfully being defiant of
the teacher, the teacher understands that theyâre
exhibiting behaviors because something is going on in
their lives that is causing them to behave in a certain
way.
17. The Situation: Teenage Pregnancy
⊠Studentâs unexpressed reasons
âŠOther peopleâs suspected reasons
âŠCurses her will possibly hear
âŠWords of comfort for her
18. Discouraging Facts about counseling
⊠It is time-consuming
⊠It is emotionally tiring
⊠It is physically exhausting
⊠It is frequently unsuccessful because we cannot impose on
them what can be perceived as the best and swift solution
⊠It looks unrewarding.
19. Counseling is notâŠ
âŠJudgmental
âŠGiving Advice
âŠExpecting in a way you behaved
âŠAttempting to sort out the problems
âŠGetting emotionally involved with the students
âŠLooking at studentâs problems from your own
perspective, based on your own value system.
22. Need for a Professional
âŠKnow when professional counseling is needed
âŠKeep administrators informed â Cover yourself!
âŠDocumentation is key!
âŠKeep parents in the loop.
âŠReach out to community to find Muslim Counselors
24. The Eight Commandments
1.Be nonjudgmental
2.Be Empathic
3.Donât give personal advice
4.Donât begin with questions
5.Donât take responsibility for the other personâs
problem
25. The Eight Commandments
6. Donât interpret (when a paraphrase will do)
7. Stick to the here and now
8. Deal with the feelings first
26. TYPICAL SITUATIONS THAT MAKE SOME
COUNSELORS UNEASY
You feel like you are going around in circles and
not getting anywhere.
-Solution: pick one area to concentrate on and not
let the client get away from it.
-if it gets to be too much of a problem, express your
feelings-âweâre not getting anywhere because youâŠ.â
27. TYPICAL SITUATIONS THAT MAKE SOME
COUNSELORS UNEASY
The student starts crying.
-reassure the client that its okay to cry
The student becomes hysterical
-talk calmly
-ask whether he prefers to be alone for awhile or wishes
to continue the session later
-be prepared for a rather lengthy session
28. TYPICAL SITUATIONS THAT MAKE SOME
COUNSELORS UNEASY
You are attracted to the client, or the client is
attracted to you, or both
-clarify the nature of your relationship
A person wants to have someone to talk to, rather
than to work on problems.
-if you want to accept this, fine
-if you donât, be firm about being willing to talk about
problems, but not being wiling just to talk
29. Everyone deserves a chance
All students must be viewed as
potential high achievers as opposed to
only high-ability students
32. CREED OF THE TEACHER AS
COUNSELOR
People seek us out. They seek us out for very private
and painful reasons. We must be able to tell them
what we can offer. If only for the ethics of the situation,
people must have the right to know beforehand our
personal values and our objectives.
33. 1. I will not agree to help you go off the edge. I will not
agree to help you become a robotized normal and
adjusted person. I will not help you stay and wallow in
the cesspool of your own making. All these go against
my values. I will help you become autonomous, more
resistant to enculturation, more loving of yourself, more
excited, sensitive and full, more free to continue
becoming the authority of your own living.
CREED OF THE TEACHER AS
COUNSELOR
34. CREED OF THE TEACHER AS
COUNSELOR
2. I cannot give you your dreams or fix you up, simply
because I cannot .
3. I cannot make you grow, or grow for you. You must
grow for yourself.
4. I cannot take away your pain or loneliness.
35. CREED OF THE TEACHER AS
COUNSELOR
5. I will not sense your world for you, evaluate your
world for you, or tell you what is best for you in
your world, for you have your own world and I have
mine.
6.I cannot convince you of the crucial choice of
choosing the scary uncertainty of growing over the
safe misery of not growing.
36. CREED OF THE TEACHER AS
COUNSELOR
6.I cannot convince you of the crucial choice of
choosing the scary uncertainty of growing over the
safe misery of not growing.
7. I want to be with you and know you as a rich and
growing friend, yet I cannot get close to you when you
choose not to grow.
37. CREED OF THE TEACHER AS
COUNSELOR
8.When I begin to care for you out of pity, when I
begin to lose trust in you, then I am toxic, bad,
inhibiting for you and you for me.
38. CREED OF THE TEACHER AS
COUNSELOR
9.You bet, my helping is conditional; I will be with you,
I will hang on there with you as long as I continue to
get even the slightest hints that you are still trying to
grow.
10.If you accept all of these, then perhaps we can help
each other.
39. References:
⊠PDF Presentation of Sufia Azmat, âEvery Teacher A Counselorâ
⊠Smt. Ramaharan âTeacher as a Counselorâ
⊠Catechism for Filipino Catholics page 272
⊠Catechism of the Catholic Church page 505