Program goal
The M.Ed. in Counselor Education with a concentration in school counseling is a 60-credit-hour program designed to prepare counselors for elementary, middle and high schools. The school counseling concentration leads to school counseling licensure and preparation for advanced graduate work at the post-master’s level. The program requires a minimum of two years of study to complete.
The faculty makes every effort to assist students in individualizing a graduate program to match their professional needs and interests. However, individualization takes place in an environment of legitimate constraints revolving around institutional, accreditation and licensure requirements. Faculty members view each program as more than simply an aggregate of courses, and students should plan all program work with their faculty advisers.
Student learning outcomes
Professional orientation/professional identity/continuing education
- Students display knowledge and understanding of the historical and philosophical foundations of the counseling profession, including counselor professional identity, and display necessary skills in applying this knowledge and understanding to professional practice.
- Students demonstrate the ability to adhere to legal and ethical practice.
- Students understand the importance of continuing education and are committed to seeking continuing education throughout their careers.
Helping relationships/group work/career development/wellness
- Students display knowledge and understanding of counseling processes applied to both individuals and groups including knowledge of how to design, implement and evaluate programs related to academic, career and personal/social development of clients.
- Students display knowledge and skills related to responding to crises, emergencies and disasters.
- Students participate in the design, implementation and evaluation of programs that promote wellness, as well as prevention and intervention services.
Human development/wellness
Students display knowledge of theories of learning, personality development, transitions and resilience, and use this information as a basis for facilitating optimal development and wellness.
Social and cultural diversity/social justice and advocacy
- Students display knowledge and understanding of diversity and equity issues and how these issues impact clients’ academic, personal and career opportunities.
- Students display multicultural competencies including appropriate sensitivity, skills and advocacy in working with diverse clients.
- Students display knowledge and understanding of the relationship between counseling programs and academic achievement, including an understanding of factors that promote student success, and work to close the achievement gap among disenfranchised groups.
Assessment
Students display knowledge and understanding of multiple factors that may affect personal, social and academic functioning, and possesses knowledge and skills to identify, evaluate and implement appropriate needs assessments and consequent interventions.
Research
Students display knowledge and understanding of research and evaluation, including understanding of how data are used to inform decisions, and students display skills and professional practices in appropriate collection, analysis and use of data.
For school counseling concentration
- Students display knowledge of the professional models that guide the practice of school counseling and demonstrate the ability to articulate, model and advocate for appropriate school counselor duties and programs.
- Students display knowledge and understanding of the role of family-school-community collaboration on student development and strategies to enhance collaboration.
Leadership
Students display knowledge and understanding of leadership models and of the school counselor’s role in school leadership; students display appropriate skills and dispositions for working in a leadership capacity in school counseling.
VCU Graduate Bulletin, VCU Graduate School and general academic policies and regulations for all graduate students in all graduate programs
The VCU Graduate Bulletin website documents the official admission and academic rules and regulations that govern graduate education for all graduate programs at the university. These policies are established by the graduate faculty of the university through their elected representatives to the University Graduate Council.
It is the responsibility of all graduate students, both on- and off-campus, to be familiar with the VCU Graduate Bulletin as well as the Graduate School website and academic regulations in individual school and department publications and on program websites. However, in all cases, the official policies and procedures of the University Graduate Council, as published on the VCU Graduate Bulletin and Graduate School websites, take precedence over individual program policies and guidelines.
Visit the academic regulations section for additional information on academic regulations for graduate students.
Degree candidacy requirements
A graduate student admitted to a program or concentration requiring a final research project, work of art, thesis or dissertation, must qualify for continuing master’s or doctoral status according to the degree candidacy requirements of the student’s graduate program. Admission to degree candidacy, if applicable, is a formal statement by the graduate student’s faculty regarding the student’s academic achievements and the student’s readiness to proceed to the final research phase of the degree program.
Graduate students and program directors should refer to the following degree candidacy policy as published in the VCU Graduate Bulletin for complete information and instructions.
Visit the academic regulations section for additional information on degree candidacy requirements.
Graduation requirements
As graduate students approach the end of their academic programs and the final semester of matriculation, they must make formal application to graduate. No degrees will be conferred until the application to graduate has been finalized.
Graduate students and program directors should refer to the following graduation requirements as published in the Graduate Bulletin for a complete list of instructions and a graduation checklist.
Visit the academic regulations section for additional information on graduation requirements.
Other information
Students accepted into the counselor education program must make satisfactory progress toward their degrees. Students who earn unsatisfactory grades and/or exhibit unprofessional conduct may be terminated from the program. More specific information about satisfactory academic progress can be found on this website.
Admission requirements
Degree: | Semester(s) of entry: | Deadline dates: | Test requirements: |
---|---|---|---|
M.Ed. | Summer or fall | Jan 15 | GRE or MAT |
In addition to the general admission requirements of the VCU Graduate School, the following requirements represent the minimum acceptable standards for admission:
- Bachelor’s degree
- Three letters of recommendation addressing the student’s potential for graduate study in education
- Statement of intent
- Transcripts of all previous college work
- Personal interview
- Satisfactory scores on the GRE or MAT
Please visit the School of Education website for further information.
Degree requirements
In addition to general VCU Graduate School graduation requirements, students are required to complete course work in core and elective courses.
- Credit hour requirements: Students are required to complete a minimum of 60 credit hours.
- Grade requirements: Receipt of a grade of C or below in two courses constitutes automatic dismissal from the program. Courses with a grade below C cannot be used to satisfy degree requirements.
- Internship requirements: Students must complete approved internship.
- Testing requirements: Students must provide acceptable score on the National Counselor Examination.
Curriculum requirements
Course | Title | Hours |
---|---|---|
Core courses | ||
CLED 600 | Professional Orientation and Ethical Practice in Counseling | 3 |
CLED 601 | Theories of Counseling | 3 |
CLED 602 | Techniques of Counseling | 3 |
CLED 603 | Group Procedures in Counseling | 3 |
CLED 605 | Career Information and Exploration | 3 |
CLED 606 | Assessment Techniques for Counselors | 3 |
CLED 607 | Multicultural Counseling in Educational Settings | 3 |
CLED 612 | Seminar in Counseling | 3 |
CLED 615 | Lifespan Development: A Gender Perspective | 3 |
CLED 640 | Marriage, Couples and Family Counseling | 3 |
CLED 650 | Addiction Counseling | 3 |
CLED 660 | Mental Disorders, Diagnosis and Treatment Planning | 3 |
EDUS 660 | Research Methods in Education | 3 |
Elective | ||
Approved elective | 3 | |
Concentration courses | ||
CLED 604 | Practicum: School Counseling | 3 |
CLED 613 | Data-driven Comprehensive School Counseling Programs | 3 |
CLED 622 | School Counseling Services | 3 |
CLED 672 | Internship | 6 |
EDUS 673 | Democracy, Equity and Ethics in Education | 3 |
Total Hours | 60 |
The minimum total of graduate credit hours required for this degree is 60.
Contact
Communications and Enrollment Management
soeinfo@vcu.edu
(804) 827-2670
Additional contact
Philip Gnilka, Ph.D.
Associate professor and graduate program director
pbgnilka@vcu.edu
(804) 828-1332
Program website: soe.vcu.edu/academics/masters-programs/med-counselor-education