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Advice from High School Counselors: Invaluable or Worthless?

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Advice from High School Counselors: Invaluable or Worthless?
Public high school counselors not only provide emotional and disciplinary support, but help students find their future paths. However, is their advice and encouragement even helpful? Learn more about the study that discovers what's wrong with high school counseling.

High school students are faced with the daunting task of making choices that will have momentous consequences on the remainder of their lives. They must choose whether to pursue higher education at a four-year college or university, begin their studies at a two-year community college, start a vocational training program, or enter the workforce directly after high school.

For those students who decide they want to pursue a college education, the choices to be made only multiply: students must decide how to present themselves in the optimal light on college applications, which colleges to apply to, and which college to ultimately attend.

Fortunately, most public high schools have a 鈥済uidance office鈥 and guidance counselors who are given the job of helping students to navigate the sea of tough decisions that must be made towards the end of high school.

But are high school students getting the help and advice that they need from the guidance counselors at public schools? A released by the nonprofit research organization Public Agenda suggests that most people who have graduated from public high schools in the last decade do not feel that their school guidance counselors provided them with any meaningful advice.

This video shows a demonstration interview by a guidance counselor.

The Problems with the Current High School Guidance System

Lack of Personal Attention

In its to the report, the American School Counselor Association noted that although their organization, along with the American Psychological Association and the American Medical Association, recommend a ratio of 250 students for every high school guidance counselor, the national average is 460 students for each high school guidance counselor. According to the , the ratio of students per counselor is the worst in California鈥檚 public schools, where each high school guidance counselor is responsible for an average of almost 1,000 students.

Such ratios make it almost inevitable that students will feel like they don鈥檛 receive the personal attention they need from their high school guidance counselors. And indeed, 48% of the former high school students polled in the Public Agenda survey indicated that they felt like their high school guidance counselors saw them as 鈥渏ust another face in the crowd.鈥

Counselors Wearing Too Many Hats?

The troubled state of high school guidance counseling may also be due to the fact that counselors are expected to perform too many different roles in a typical public school, which does not leave them enough time to adequately address the needs of students who are considering applying to college. The Public Agenda researchers note that guidance counselors are not able to devote all of their energy to advising students on career and educational paths because 鈥渕uch of their effort is devoted to discipline issues and sorting out scheduling and other administrative mix-ups within the high school.鈥

This video offers a look at a counselor's day.

The Consequences: What Happens for Students Who Don鈥檛 Get Meaningful Counseling?

More Likely to Drop Out of College

The Public Agenda study indicates that nearly one in five of the students who declared that they felt like 鈥渏ust another face in the crowd鈥 to their high school guidance counselors ended up leaving college without completing a degree. These former 鈥渇aces in the crowd鈥 were more likely to leave college without completing a degree than were their peers who reported that their high school counselors had made an effort to 鈥渞eally get to know鈥 them and to 鈥渢reat [them] as individuals.鈥

Less Likely to Receive Financial Aid

Only 41% of students who felt they had just been a 鈥渇ace in the crowd鈥 to their high school guidance counselors received financial aid to help defray the cost of a college education. In contrast, 51% of students who felt their guidance counselors had made an effort to know them as individuals received financial aid.

What Can Be Done

Teachers Can Help

One positive finding of the Public Agenda report is that coaches and teachers often fill the role that guidance counselors do not in contemporary high schools. Two-thirds of survey respondents said that they had a teacher in high school who 鈥渞eally took an interest in them personally and encouraged them to go to college.鈥 And three-fourths of survey respondents said they had a teacher or coach who 鈥渞eally inspired them and motivated them to do their best.鈥

Provide More Support for School Counselors

In their response to the report, the American School Counselor Association said that they hoped that this report would 鈥渉ighlight the need for supporting school counselors so they can be effective鈥 rather than being used as evidence that school counselors should be eliminated.

Indeed, the report does seem to show that the problem is not so much that guidance counselors are ineffective, but rather they are often unable to do their jobs for a large number of students to whom they are assigned.

Questions? Contact us on Facebook. @publicschoolreview

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