MS in School Counseling Courses
Curriculum Details
60 total credits required
The rigorous online curriculum in the MS in School Counseling degree program features a evidence-based, detailed dive into K-12 counseling.
You’ll complete a 100-hour practicum and a 600-hour internship at schools convenient to you and graduate ready to pursue licensure as a school counselor. Six elective credits give you the opportunity to study abroad or dive deeply into an area that interests you. Those wishing to gain dual-licensure as a mental health counselor can take four additional courses in the form of elective courses. Our coursework prepares you for licensure in Indiana. Requirements vary by state.
We expect engagement via class meetings and about nine hours of coursework per week for each three-credit course.
Required Courses
Credits
An introduction to developmental theory, developmental characteristics over the lifespan, and developmental assessment for counselors-in-training. Issues in today’s PK-12 schools will be viewed with a developmental focus.
This course is designed to help students develop multicultural and advocacy competencies for working with people of diverse groups on society. Students will have opportunities to develop awareness of their own cultural values and biases, to study prevalent beliefs and attitudes of different cultures, and to develop skills useful for appropriate interactions with particular groups.
A study of basic counseling theories and techniques, followed by application of those techniques to real and role-playing experiences.
Studies that provide an understanding of career development, assessment and related life factors.
Studies that provide an understanding of individual and group approaches to assessment and evaluation of all learners.
Approaches to preparing for, preventing, responding to, and assessing traumatic events and crises at the individual, group, and systemic levels.
This course examines various theories of counseling, principles and techniques of counseling and its application to professional counseling settings. The course will provide students the competence to select the form of counseling approach that will be most effective and appropriate for the client’s worldview. Prerequisites: ED572.
A study of group interactions, occasions for group counseling, and techniques of group counseling.
A variety of supervised counseling experiences within the classroom and in the field. Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor.
Concentrated study of topic(s) of current importance, interest, and relevance in the field of school counseling.
This course continues the examination of theories of counseling, principles and techniques of counseling and its application to professional counseling settings begun in ED 672. The course will provide students the competence to select the form of counseling approach that will be most effective and appropriate for the client’s worldview. Prerequisites: ED572, ED672.
Three hundred clock hours of on-the-job experience in all aspects of counseling and guidance with a qualified supervisor. Prerequisites: Counseling practicum and permission of the instructor. Repeatable for credit for up to six hours.
This workshop will teach techniques to assist the bereaved child and explore unique grief styles of children and their families. You will learn developmental stages, grief reactions, communication tools, group processes and the facilitator’s role in companioning grieving children. This course offers an option for interested participants to become a facilitator for Brooke’s Place.
This course will emphasize critical review of research in the counseling field. There will be a specific focus on the research process, including problem identification, data gathering, and organization and presentation of a research project.
Electives
Credits
This course addresses professional practice issues in mental health counseling. It includes history, identity, roles, and trends affecting the field and practice of mental health counseling.
This course provides an intensive study/analysis of selected counseling cases to enhance assessment competencies in case description, problem appraisal, assessment, diagnostic classification, intervention strategies as well as case consultation and presentation skills. Emphasis is given to the principles and practices that relate to psychopathy, psychopharmacology, DSM diagnosis, etiology and assessment, systematic treatment planning, interviewing, and short- and long-term interventions.
This class will provide an overview of community agency counseling, the role of the counselor in communities, prevention, outreach, systemic issues, multicultural issues in community agency counseling, advocacy and social change, and service deliver programs. The course will also focus on the application of community counseling theories and problem solving within the community and agency setting.
Provides orientation to the etiology, prevalence, symptoms, and basic treatment approaches of the major DSM-5 categories of psychopathology. Instruction will enable students to distinguish between abnormal and normal behavior by recognizing and classifying signs, symptoms, behaviors, and thoughts associated of major syndromes of psychopathology. Course will cover most major diagnostic areas including (but not limited to) Depressive, Anxiety, Psychotic-related, Trauma-related, Substance Use, Childhood, and other Disorders. For the purpose of identifying effects and side-effects of prescribed psychotropic medications, the basic classifications, indications, and contradictions of commonly prescribed psychopharmacological medications are surveyed.
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