Participants
Coleman Evans has worked as a school counselor at South
Paulding Middle School from 1999-Present. He has a Specialist degree in School
Counseling from University of West Alabama. He has daily and monthly
interactions with the Division of Family and Children’s Services (DFACS), due
to referrals he receives regularly dealing with children subjected to substance
abuse, abuse, neglect, or other harmful events that deal with children in our
school.
Kristie Amritt has worked as the Special Education
Department Head at Nebo Elementary School from 2001-Present. She is in charge
of the special education population at her elementary school and also runs a
clothes closet for underprivileged children. She has experience in working with
diverse and ethnic families and also builds loving and positive experiences for
the lowest of the socioeconomic class, usually plagued with substance abuse,
homelessness, and/or neglect. She has
many enlightening stories to share about her experiences working with this
population.
Interviews
I thoroughly enjoyed the interview process. Both
participants were eager to speak with me and shared invaluable information
regarding my course project topic, substance abuse. The biggest success in
speaking with them is getting to know more about what they do professionally. I
know each person on a personal level, but learning about their experience and
situations they encounter in their schools was truly inspiring. One situation I
learned about was the extent of what our counselor at our school has had to add
to his job, due to budget constraints. Mr. Evans explained, “My position can be
very demanding as well as I am the only counselor in a building of over
slightly 500 students. So, I am
responsible for providing counseling services, assisting with all testing
(training and administration), and helping to provide a smooth transition for
students going from elementary to middle school and students going from my
school to high school to just a name a few of my duties. Recently, there has been a big push to make
sure all students participate in a career/job program the state of Georgia has
developed called GACollege411. This
program introduces students (in the computer lab) to opportunities after high
school such as the armed forces and higher education.” I feel that some of his daily and
administrative tasks take priority over the counseling at times, which is frustrating.
As an educator in the same building, I need to be more cognizant of these tasks
and need to be available to help when needed, so that he can do the job he
loves, counseling.
Through the annotated bibliographies I have learned a
plethora of information regarding substance abuse. I have researched the
foundational research of Bronfenbrenner and how substance abuse fits into his
theory. Additionally, I have looked into
how substance abuse affects mental health, the brain make-up, maternal abuse,
and substance abuse vs child maltreatment. I have also delved into how
substance abuse affects the community through truancy, homelessness, suicide,
and cultural beliefs and ties to substance abuse. Finally, I have discovered
how stress/trauma affect substance abuse through risky sexual behavior, family
members, racial discrimination, community cohesion, and how it affects gay, lesbians,
and transgender people. I have been looking at different viewpoints and how substance
abuse affects the entire family unit, but have not had much success in linking
early childhood to substance abuse. Any
articles or information linking my research to early childhood would be much appreciated!
Hi Emily,
ReplyDeleteI found your interview with your school counselor to be very interesting seeing as though I think his work load is common among counselors in public schools. I have seen multiple counselors in high schools, but not in elementary or middle schools. Just as you stated, it frustrates me. With 500 children in the school, I'm sure that there are many opportunities missed because of administrative and testing demands. I feel that the counselor's role to "counsel" in the school is one of the most important and I wish that they were supported more across the country. I think this would drastically effect success rates and community within the school.