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HISTORY OF PSU’S DEPARTMENT OF COUNSELOR EDUCATION
The 1960s
During the 1960s, universities benefited from the availability of
National Defense Education Act (NDEA), 1958, grant monies for the
initiation of training programs to place counselors in our schools.
PSU received some of these grant monies, which also provided stipends
for graduate students, and counselor education in the School of
Education was initiated. In 1968, the university provided formal
approval for the curricular offerings and the “program”, entirely
focused on the preparation of school counselors, became an ongoing
part of the School of Education’s curriculum. At first, the program
was focused on providing the TSPC-required course work for
certification of school counselors; there was not much emphasis on
granting degrees with a school counseling designation. It was not
until the late 1980s that students’ transcripts indicated anything
other than the MA or MS in Education. At that time, it became possible
to receive a transcript designated as an “MA or MS Education:
Counseling” (or “Curriculum and Instruction”, “EPFA”, etc.). The
Master's course work was limited to 45 credits, no differentiation was
made between Practicum and Internship, and there were no provisions
for videotaping and little on-site supervision.
The 1970s
As a result of the Community Mental Health Centers Act (1963), federal
funds were made available throughout the nation for the creation of
community mental health centers and by the mid-1970s more and more
positions were available for Master’s prepared counselors with a
community/mental health specialization. Few universities had programs
designed for the Master’s level practitioner, although there were
doctoral programs for counselors/therapists who wanted to work in a
non-school setting. The American Counseling Association began to
assume leadership in the conceptualization of what a Master’s
curriculum should “deliver” to graduate students through the efforts
of one of its newly formed (1976) divisions, the American Mental
Health Counselors Association (AMCHA) and an affiliate group, now
known as the Council for the Accreditation of Counseling and Related
Educational Programs (CACREP). By the late 1970s, PSU’s counselor
education faculty began to offer courses to counselor candidates
interested in community/mental health counseling and began to increase
degree requirements to work towards eventual accreditation by CACREP.
At first, there was not much difference between degree requirements
for a Master’s with a school counseling focus and a Master’s with a
community/mental health focus. In 1977, Dr. Carol Burden was hired
and, in 1978, Dr. David Capuzzi was added to the counselor education
faculty to assist Dr. Neal Phelps, program coordinator and Dr. Charles
Bursch. Dr. Phelps died in early 1979 and Dr. Phyllis Lee, who worked
in a different component of the university, was asked to return to the
School of Education and assist with the Counselor Education program.
(Dr. Lee moved to OSU in the mid-1980s; Dr. Bursch retired in the
mid-1980s and died in 1999).
The 1980s
In the early 1980s, the counselor education faculty developed an
in-house clinic to provide graduate students with better opportunities
to develop their counseling skills, under close supervision, in the
context of work with clients referred by schools and clinics in the
metropolitan area. The space for such a clinic was part of the fifth
floor design at the time the School of Education was built; initially,
however, the space was not equipped with video equipment and part of
the development task was to ask for the funding needed to make the
clinic operative. Such a facility would also be necessary for eventual
CACREP accreditation.
The prototype for our current Master’s program was created at the time
that the 1988 federal funding, for the purpose of creating a
rehabilitation counseling specialization, became available. At that
time, Dr. Hanoch Livneh and Dr. David Capuzzi worked together to
collect the data needed to apply for funding and, when the grant was
funded, Dr. Livneh was brought onto the faculty to direct the grant.
(There have been two three-year and two five-year funding cycles). At
first, Dr. Livneh’s salary was entirely funded by the federal grant.
One of the terms of the funding was that the university would
eventually provide funding for Dr. Livneh and, over time, this did
occur. This grant provided impetus for a much-needed training program
in the Pacific Northwest and provides stipends to our rehabilitation
graduate students. (At the beginning of the 1999/2000 academic year,
Dr. Lisa Wilson was added, via rehabilitation grant monies, on a
half-time basis, to teach in the rehabilitation counseling specialty).
Because Dr. Livneh was required, by national training and funding
requirements, to eventually apply for program accreditation from the
Council on Rehabilitation Education (CORE), the curriculum was
designed utilizing core courses already offered via counselor
education followed by specialty courses then focused solely on
rehabilitation counseling. This provided impetus for both the school
and community programs to develop more discrete specialty offerings as
a follow-up to core courses that all students completed and to expand
the degree program to its current 72-credit format so that it would be
possible to achieve CACREP accreditation. Dr. Carol Burden and Dr. Art
Terry worked to develop the school counseling specialization; the
community specialization also began to be refined.
The 1990s
In the early 1990s university dollars were available for the
recruitment of minority faculty via a program called the “Target of
Opportunity” program. The counselor education faculty was authorized
to conduct a search and Dr. Liz Wosley-George was hired to develop the
community specialization. Soon thereafter, the counselor education
faculty successfully applied for and received CACREP accreditation for
both the school and community-focused Master’s and CORE accreditation
for the rehabilitation-focused Master’s. In 1994, because of the
unexpected death of Dr. Art Terry, Dr. Russ Miars was hired, on a
fixed-term basis at first, to offer some of the course work previously
taught by Dr. Art Terry. Dr. Miars brought needed expertise to our
program in areas such as testing and career and life style planning as
well as human development across the life span. In 1997 Russ Miars was
moved to a tenure track position. At the same time, a half-time
clinic director was hired to better manage the increasing volume of
clients and scheduled counseling sessions in the fifth floor clinic.
Dr. Miars’ previous employment was focused on university counseling
center work and the program needed a replacement for the school
counseling emphasis lost when Dr. Terry died. This led to the
authorization of a counselor education/teacher education position and
Dr. Rolla Lewis was hired in 1995. Dr. Lewis joined the counselor
education faculty on a full-time basis in 1998/99, following the
retirement of Dr. Carol Burden, and this precipitated the need to
recruit for a counselor educator who could fill the half-time
counselor education/curriculum and instruction position. In the spring
of 1999, Dr. Susan Halverson was hired for the 1999/2000 academic year
for this joint appointment; her background is in both school
counseling and Couples, Marriage, and Family counseling.
At about the time of Dr. Terry’s death, the counselor education
faculty was approached by a member of the Oregon Board of Licensed
Professional Counselors and Therapists and asked to develop a course
sequence, and possible specialization, for the preparation of Couples,
Marriage, and Family therapists since no state-supported university
provides such training and most licensees were from out of state. A
planning committee, comprised of Dr. David Capuzzi and Dr. Cheryl
Livneh (SOE), Dr. Sandy Anderson (Social Work), Dr. Shirley Hanson (OHSU
School of Nursing), Dr. Stan Cohen (Oregon Board), Patrick Feeney (PSU
Extended Studies) and one or two community representatives, planned a
curriculum for a Couples, Marriage, and Family course sequence. Dr.
David Capuzzi and Dr. Cheryl Livneh presented the proposal to the
Oregon Board of Licensed Professional Counselors and Therapists and
received conditional approval to offer the program in a way that would
insure the licensure of PSU graduates. Subsequently, the counselor
education faculty received university approval for a course sequence
in Couples, Marriage, and Family counseling so that students could add
the course work on to their 72-credit hour programs to achieve
licensure in that area. The program began solely through the support
of Extended Studies and the efforts of adjunct professors, hired by
Extended Studies, to offer the majority of the specialty courses.
During the 1999-2000 academic year, Couples, Marriage, and Family
counseling was approved as the fourth specialty.
In 1999, the Department of Special and Counselor Education received
final authorization for a much-needed doctoral specialization in
Special and Counselor Education. This new doctoral program is in the
early stages of development.
CURRENT STATUS In the fall of 2008 the Counselor Education Program became the Department of Counselor
Education with Dr. Rick Johnson appointed Department Chair. At this time the
Department's Couples, Marriage, and Family program is in the process of expanding to meet
the CACREP requirements. In addition, the Couples, Marriage, and Family Continuing
Education certificate is now offered through the Department of Counselor Education.
Finally, in the fall of 2008 the program changed to a three-year-minimum format to
provide students with a realistic pacing of the course work, reduced requirements in the
summer,and internships that begin fall term rather than winter term.
General
Since applicants to the program have exceeded the number that can be
accommodated via admissions each year, program faculty accepted more
students than usual in return for the fact that Russ Miars was
switched to a tenure-track position at the beginning of the 1997-1998
academic year. During the 1998/1999 academic year, the program
conducted a self-study for CACREP since it hosted a CACREP team on
campus during the spring of 2000 to reapply for accreditation for
another 7-year cycle. Considerable faculty time was devoted to
preparing for the site visit; this expenditure of effort was
successful and resulted in CACREP accreditation through 2007.
Our programs are approved by the Oregon Board of Licensed Professional
Counselors and Therapists and TSPC for licensure purposes, and our graduates have
no difficulty in obtaining their credentials once their post-degree
requirements for supervised practice are completed.
School Counseling Program
During the 1998-99 school year, the School Counseling Program
initiated a collaborative off-campus clinic with the David Douglas
School District. The Portland State University/David Douglas School
District Collaborative Clinic is tied closely to the university
mission by serving both the community needs and the students being
trained.
CACREP recommendations and the 1998 Teacher Standards and Practices
Commission (TSPC) revisions in school counseling licensure have
prompted revision of the school counseling program and a school
counseling program core has been defined. Additionally, a
Licensure Only option has been introduced in order to enable highly
qualified students with MA/MS/MSW graduate degrees from clinical
programs to be recommended for licensure as school counselors; prior
to the introduction of this option, competent professionals outside of
the school counseling program were unable to become licensed as
school counselors in Oregon.
The completion of the School Counseling Program results not
only in TSPC licensure as a school counselor, but also eligibility as
a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC) through the state licensure
board.
Rehabilitation Counseling Program
The 1999-2000 academic year marked the beginning of another five-year
federal funding cycle and, as previously noted, facilitated the hiring
of Dr. Lisa Wilson. This funding cycle will terminate in 2004 and will
result in a total of 16 years of federal funding for this program particular . Because this program is fully accredited by
CORE, the completion of the Rehabilitation Program results in
eligibility for the Certified Rehabilitation Counselor (CRC)
credential and Oregon state licensure as an LPC.
The Community Counseling Program
This program, along with the School Program, continues
to have the largest number of applicants. The “block” of program courses in this area has been vastly improved in recent
years. No major changes are anticipated in this program during
the current academic year. The Community Counseling Program
meets the requirements for the Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC)
in the State of Oregon.
The Couples, Marriage, and Family Program
This program meets both the licensing requirements for LMFT (Licensed Couples,
Marriage, and Family therapist) LPC in the State of Oregon. The program courses (with the exception of COUN 575) will be
offered during the academic year starting with the 2001-2002 academic
year.
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