As
I read Chapter Four and the Walsh, Barrett & Depaul (2007) article I was
very enticed. I say this because it made me think of my weekend two weeks ago. Despite
not living in the community, on Friday I went to a Hempfield High School
football game. Then on Saturday I watched the Hempfield Midget Football Team
play their games and the Midget Cheerleaders cheer. As I sat at the High School
game I thought to myself “Look at this turnout. Look at the sheer number of
children, teenagers and adolescents that are hear, hanging out, and supporting
their community instead of engaging in ‘popular’ but negative actions. When I
went to the Midget games the next day much of that community was out and about
again being supporting of not only the football players ranging in age from 8
to 14, but also supporting the cheerleaders and encouraging them too. And then
it hit me when I returned home…
As a TSS I spent a year at Mountville
Elementary. I spent two years at Landisville Primary Center. I also spent two
years at the Hempfield Recreation Commission and I’ve also spent some time in
the High School too… And what I noticed/learned at all of these sites is that
there genuinely is a feeling of community and caring at all of those places. In
the school setting the counselors genuinely are important. They corroborate
with their principals as Mr. Jahnke, Mr. Swantner, and Mr. Axe work strongly
and effectively with their counselors. The counselors themselves work together
strongly with monthly meetings involving counselors from the 9 different
schools with new techniques and plans to use. A lot of the administration lives
within the district and therefore their children are also subject to growing up
in this atmosphere. All of the elementary schools teach monthly character
traits and foster community through “contests” in the November character trait
month for Generosity/Charity. But it’s not just the schools themselves that are
so awesome! The Hempfield Recreation Commission are the ones that run those
midget teams and help the kids make that transition from midget to freshman football
and cheer teams in High School. The HRC has after school programs at all of the
elementary schools to give the children something to do after school that is
appropriate. They communicate very well with the school and convey excellent
life lessons concurrent with what the counselors are teaching.
So
what does this all have to do with our readings? Well this situation is the
exact opposite of the situation with Ty in Chapter 4. While I’m sure Mountville,
East Pete, and Landisville do have their own problems they also have proactive
programs in place that promote positive self-concept, positive community, and
strong academics. That is incredibly comprehensive in that it covers family,
individual, school and community. It is very systematic in that it is
preventative but the counselors themselves are trained to deal with students
that need intervention. Additionally,
Hempfield has a tremendous system for handling behavioral deficits (treatment)
in the way that they have alternative education courses such as ES at L.P.C. or
have R.E.C. Overall I just think it is an excellent example so kids don’t have
to end up like Ty. They don't have to feel overburdened. That when the family needs help the community is certainly willing to provide resources. That the teachers care that their students personal/at home life isn't ideal(not for the parent, but for the child)
Now
maybe Hempfield doesn’t stack up to Boston since Hempfield is an affluent
suburb of a small city and Boston is one of the country’s largest urban areas.
But the results of the Walsh et. al article make me believe that gradually
communities like this can be established in Boston starting with school
counselors implementing programs that deliver student support in and out of the
school such as the Boston Connects program. Because I always grew up in rural
and suburban areas I wanted to work in that sort of school system. But this
article definitely makes me think I could work in a city. Maybe not Boston size
but definitely much bigger than a Lancaster. Whether this is through
implementing sporting programs that connect to the schools, aligning with
recreation commissions or community associations, or some other methods to keep
the youth out of negative aspects and keep families from trouble remains to be
seen. But I’ve seen it done in a small suburb and hear about something related
in Boston thanks to the article and so it seems promising.
Dollarhide, C.T., & Saginak, K.A. (2012). Comprehensive
school counseling programs (2nd
Ed.). New York: Pearson, Inc.
Walsh, M. E., Barrett, J. G., &
DePaul, J. (2007). Day-to-day activities of school counselors:
Alignment with new directions in the
field and the ASCA national model®. Professional
School Counseling, 10(4), 370-378.
I really liked your post Matt and how you put together different elements you were experiencing in Hempfield and recognized what it was...community!! I really do believe it takes a village to raise a child. We lived in the Hempfield School District for 8 years and I saw this too. There were other issues I was not as pleased with but no place is perfect and I do think that Hempfield recognizes the importance of community and collaboration with counselors/principals/teachers in their schools.
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