Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Summer 2021
Journal / Book Title
Teaching and Supervision in Counseling
Abstract
Using self-study methodology, the researchers sought to understand their practices in developing school counselors and counselor educators who acknowledge and resist anti-Black racism and marginalization to prevent harm through complacency. Given counselor education’s existence as overwhelmingly White and Eurocentric, the authors investigate disrupting the heteronormative structures inherent in counseling and the academy with the prioritizing of race, systemic inequities, and cyclical trauma in their faculty roles (e.g., teaching, supervising, and service) in efforts to shift a profession slow to address society’s ever-changing mental health needs. The team of counselor educators from different states in the northeast use a thematic analysis to highlight their challenges and successes at each institution and within the broader counselor education and academic context.
DOI
10.7290/tsc030211
Montclair State University Digital Commons Citation
Ieva, Kara; Hannon, Michael D.; and Vereen, Linwood G., "The intentionality of confronting racism, systemic oppression, and cyclical trauma in counselor education: A self-study" (2021). Department of Counseling Scholarship and Creative Works. 122.
https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/counseling-facpubs/122
Rights
This article is Open Access and distributed under a Creative Commons 4.0 license.
Published Citation
Ieva, K., Hannon, M. D., & Vereen, L. G. (Summer 2021). The intentionality of confronting racism, systemic oppression, and cyclical trauma in counselor education: A self-study. Teaching and Supervision in Counseling, 3(22). https://trace.tennessee.edu/tsc/vol3/iss2/11