First
of all, I just want to give a shoutout to Dollarhide and Saginak for using more
diverse names in their vignettes (Dovey?)!
Aside
from that, I found this chapter salient to my current client that I am working
with in Brief Counseling. Dollarhide and Saginak (2012) emphasize that it is
important for counselors to know the ins and outs of their clients lives when
they begin to counsel them, because things like an IEP or medication history
can be very telling of the students behavior (p. 124). I know in my situation,
my client wants to work on his trouble getting to sleep at night, however he
mentioned in a session that he takes medicine every morning to help him focus.
I am guessing that he takes Ritalin for ADD, which could partially explain why
he is still stimulated at 8:00 at night. Without knowing this information, I
will not be able to properly counsel him because the cause may be directly
related to his medication.
The relevance of this chapter continued in the
discussion on crisis prevention and suicide (Dollarhide & Saginak, 2012, p.
125). As most of you know, I helped coordinate the youth mental health rights
portion of the conference last week by hosting Aevidum, a student-led group
that attempts to de-stigmatize talking about depression and suicide so that
students suffering in the dark may be able to find some light. In theory, this
is an ideal way to look at the topics, but I wonder how many Joe Vulopases
there are out in the world who are actively becoming aware of warning signs of
depression and suicide. Hopefully being a counselor who is as involved in the
classroom as possible would help with detecting students who are near-crisis,
but it also depends on the teachers to make referrals about students who may
seem like they are struggling. I know that in my teacher shadowing experience, when
a student was complaining about feeling ill the teacher brushed it off as
hunger. That could have been good instinct and experience on the teacher’s
part, but what about when a seemingly angst-y high school student casually
mentions that they feel depressed in math class? Is that something a teacher
will brush off?
My final note on this chapter has to do with the
multicultural aspect. Dollarhide and Saginak (2012) spend a page or so
discussing multicultural counseling, but then in the follow-up vignette on
Dovey and Phillipe, Dovey reaches Mom with no problem and is able to instantly
detect the problem going on at home that is contributing to his fighting
behavior (p. 135). This would be an ideal situation for a counselor, however I
feel that it is not very realistic (especially given what we learned in
Multicultural Counseling about other cultures keeping quiet on family issues to
mental health workers). I appreciate the examples, but I think it is critical
to remember that our jobs will not work out that smoothly with every family.
Dollarhide, C.T., &
Saginak, K.A. (2012). Comprehensive school counseling programs (2nd Ed.). New
York: Pearson, Inc.
I agree with you Julia, Multicultural Counseling did show us a different side to counseling other ethnic groups and anticipated reactions from them. It would be nice if every student was a paper cut out of the previous, however I feel that would get extremely boring after awhile.
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