carrie123
Cathlete
Maybe you could help with a question that has been plaguing me about the master's degree I'm pursuing, in school counsleing.
Last night was an orientation class, and the professor worried me, she said school counselors are the first ones who get canned when budgets get low in the public schools and we would have to fight with lots of data and numbers to keep our jobs later, and that's if there are even any jobs out there when we graduate. She also said that the teachers usually treat the school counselors as outsiders and don't really have a team mindset. I sincerely hope this is not true.
I have always enjoyed helping children on a more personal basis, especially when I worked one-on-one for a few years, which is what swayed me to want to be a counselor to begin with. Too many children need someone to talk to help them through some problems outside the classroom. I think it makes them more productive in the classroom.
As a substitute teacher, I can appreciate the mountains of paperwork, lesson plans, meetings, etc. that the teachers have to deal with. I hope that having a counselor nearby would make teaching easier for some if the students can focus on the school work in the classroom and work through some more personal issues with the counselor and of course the parents, guardian, etc. outside the classroom.
I am 34, with 2 teenagers and a husband who believes I am working toward a more secure future for all of us. Last night I had a dream that I quit my masters for counseling and went back to school to be an elementary teacher. I am pretty confused. I love helping others, but graduate school is so very expensive and time consuming (not to mention the excruciating pain from sitting in my car for the 1 1/2 hr. drive one way, and the 2 3-hour lectures), that I would hate for it to have been for nothing later on. Any opinions on this??? I wouldn't be able to survive graduate school if I thought even for a moment that it might be for nothing
I really do love teaching, especially elementary. I sort of wish that I hadn't listened to my advisor. He told me to get my degree in Business, after I had started taking education classes, and then get my degree in counseling, because they went hand in hand he said. He said if you understand levy's and budgets, and so forth, (business) then I wouldn't have a problem fitting in with the administration dept. (counseling). I was so confused that I just did what he suggested. Ok I've written a book here, Have a nice healthy, clean dinner tonight and take care.
Hopefully, I'll be able to check back in before I leave. Take care
Carrie
http://www.3fatchicks.net/img/tulip-bar/slider-snail1/lb/209/145/178/.png"
http://www.picturetrail.com/uid67
Last night was an orientation class, and the professor worried me, she said school counselors are the first ones who get canned when budgets get low in the public schools and we would have to fight with lots of data and numbers to keep our jobs later, and that's if there are even any jobs out there when we graduate. She also said that the teachers usually treat the school counselors as outsiders and don't really have a team mindset. I sincerely hope this is not true.
I have always enjoyed helping children on a more personal basis, especially when I worked one-on-one for a few years, which is what swayed me to want to be a counselor to begin with. Too many children need someone to talk to help them through some problems outside the classroom. I think it makes them more productive in the classroom.
As a substitute teacher, I can appreciate the mountains of paperwork, lesson plans, meetings, etc. that the teachers have to deal with. I hope that having a counselor nearby would make teaching easier for some if the students can focus on the school work in the classroom and work through some more personal issues with the counselor and of course the parents, guardian, etc. outside the classroom.
I am 34, with 2 teenagers and a husband who believes I am working toward a more secure future for all of us. Last night I had a dream that I quit my masters for counseling and went back to school to be an elementary teacher. I am pretty confused. I love helping others, but graduate school is so very expensive and time consuming (not to mention the excruciating pain from sitting in my car for the 1 1/2 hr. drive one way, and the 2 3-hour lectures), that I would hate for it to have been for nothing later on. Any opinions on this??? I wouldn't be able to survive graduate school if I thought even for a moment that it might be for nothing
I really do love teaching, especially elementary. I sort of wish that I hadn't listened to my advisor. He told me to get my degree in Business, after I had started taking education classes, and then get my degree in counseling, because they went hand in hand he said. He said if you understand levy's and budgets, and so forth, (business) then I wouldn't have a problem fitting in with the administration dept. (counseling). I was so confused that I just did what he suggested. Ok I've written a book here, Have a nice healthy, clean dinner tonight and take care.
Hopefully, I'll be able to check back in before I leave. Take care
Carrie
http://www.3fatchicks.net/img/tulip-bar/slider-snail1/lb/209/145/178/.png"
http://www.picturetrail.com/uid67