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Counselor Education Alumni Newsletter 2013

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The official alumni newsletter of the Curry School of Education's programs in Counselor Education
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COUNSELOR FALL 2013 Curry Counselor Ed Inspire, Create, Transform T he leadership of the Counselor Education program by Associate Professor Antoinette Thomas over the past year has continued to solidify the program’s focus on school counseling, career counseling, and promoting educational equity. Dr. Thomas directed the program by clearly defining initiatives. She streamlined course offerings, while maintaining the program’s extensive history of national accreditation through the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP). She began to revamp the purpose and function of the Personal and Career Development Center. Through the center, the program provides career services both to the university and to our local community. She also spearheaded the development of counseling- related undergraduate courses, which supports the university’s strategic efforts to engage all students through collaboration across schools and programs. An annual school counseling summit at the Curry School has been established with Dr. Thomas’ support and the creativity and initiative of Dr. Paul Harris. The summit’s purpose is to promote educational equity, access, and social justice in schools. Dr. Thomas turned over the leadership of the program to Dr. Derick Williams in July 2013. As program area director, he works to continue the program’s mission, which is now expressed by our newly adopted motto, “Inspire, Create, Transform.” This mission fuels our efforts toward excellence. The program “inspires” its students by helping them become leaders of systemic change in public schools. education 1 COUNSELOR EDUCATION • FALL 2013 /// Curry Counselor Ed faculty: Amanda Flora, Paul Harris, Antoinette Thomas, and Derick Williams. —continued on page 2 School Counseling Summit Counselor Education is published by the Curry School of Education and is sponsored by the Curry School of Education Foundation, P.O. Box 400276, Charlottesville, VA 22904 http://curry.virginia.edu/couns-ed-newsletter The Counselor Education pro- gram will host its second annual School Counseling Summit on Monday, November 4, 2013, from 12-3 p.m. in Bavaro Hall Rm. 116 (Holloway). The keynote presenter will be Dr. George McMahon (M.Ed. ’96), assistant professor at George Mason University. He will engage the audience in a conversation on the topic of “Privilege.” All counselors, graduate students, administrators, and other interest- ed persons are invited to join us. Space is limited, so please email [email protected] with your full name to reserve your seat.
Transcript
Page 1: Counselor Education Alumni Newsletter 2013

COUNSELORFALL 2013

Curry Counselor EdInspire, Create, Transform

The leadership of the Counselor Education program by Associate Professor Antoinette Thomas over the past year has continued to solidify the program’s focus on school counseling, career counseling, and promoting educational equity.

Dr. Thomas directed the program by clearly defining initiatives. She streamlined course offerings, while maintaining the program’s extensive history of national accreditation through the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP). She began to revamp the purpose and function of the Personal and Career Development Center. Through the center, the program provides career services both to the university and to our local community. She also spearheaded the development of counseling-related undergraduate courses, which supports the university’s strategic efforts to engage all students through collaboration across schools and programs.

An annual school counseling summit at the Curry School has been established with Dr. Thomas’ support and the creativity and initiative of Dr. Paul Harris. The summit’s purpose is to promote educational equity, access, and social justice in schools.

Dr. Thomas turned over the leadership of the program to Dr. Derick Williams in July 2013. As program area director, he works to continue the program’s mission, which is now expressed by our newly adopted motto, “Inspire, Create, Transform.” This mission fuels our efforts toward excellence. The program “inspires” its students by helping them become leaders of systemic change in

public schools.

education

1C O U N S E L O R E D U C AT I O N • FA L L 2 0 1 3

/// Curry Counselor Ed faculty: Amanda Flora, Paul Harris, Antoinette Thomas, and Derick Williams.

—continued on page 2

School Counseling Summit

Counselor Education is published by the Curry School of Education and is sponsored by the Curry School of Education Foundation, P.O. Box 400276, Charlottesville, VA 22904

http://curry.virginia.edu/couns-ed-newsletter

The Counselor Education pro-gram will host its second annual School Counseling Summit on Monday, November 4, 2013, from 12-3 p.m. in Bavaro Hall Rm. 116 (Holloway).

The keynote presenter will be Dr. George McMahon (M.Ed. ’96), assistant professor at George Mason University. He will engage the audience in a conversation on the topic of “Privilege.”

All counselors, graduate students, administrators, and other interest-ed persons are invited to join us.

Space is limited, so please email [email protected] with your full name to reserve your seat.

Page 2: Counselor Education Alumni Newsletter 2013

1950s & 60sJames Harding Siske (M.Ed. ’56, Ph.D. ’56) has just renewed his substitute teaching certification for 2014 in Greensboro/Guilford County, NC. …He lives in Iredell, Texas, in the winter months and is president of AARP Bosque County.”Helen (Jones) Von Salzen (M.Ed. ’68) “I have long been retired from a 25-year career as a guidance counselor in the Fairfax County Public Schools. … Since my retirement, I have trained and served as a Master Gardener and as a Certified Tea and Etiquette Consultant...”Ryland A. Yeatts (B.S. ’58; M.Ed. ’64) worked for 25 years in Fairfax County, where he still resides. Since then he has traveled exten-sively via cruises, mainly. He attended his 40th, 50th, and his 55th reunions at U.Va.

1970s & 80sAnna Askounis (M.Ed. ’72, Ed.D. ’77) is happily retired and living in Charlottesville, right down the street from the Curry School!Ilene Bergsmann (M.Ed. ’74) “Having spent 25 years working in adult and juvenile corrections...I decided to do something com-pletely different. For the last 15 years, I have owned a promotional products company in Denver....Elizabeth Lancaster Breeden (M.Ed. ’74) “...I retired from the management of Biscuit Run Studios. I currently manage ArtInPlace, a public art program in Charlottesville...”Janet (Huber) Kabel (M.Ed. ’77) is retired. ...“I would love to hear from other Counselor Education program folks who were at Curry 1976-77. Contact me: [email protected]”Debbie Donnelly McChesney (M.Ed. ’77) ...is currently working as a writer and editor in Seaside, Fla., and authored the book Once Upon a Child. She works as an independent college counselor. Sarah (Ackerman) McDonald (Ed.S. ’82) is in private practice in Pensacola, Fla., as a Licensed Mental Health Counselor. Beverly Momsen (Ed.D. ’81) works for Chevron Corporation in Global Workforce Development as management development program manager. She lives in northern California and is traveling around the world.Sophie Speidel (B.S. ’85, M.Ed. ’89) “... In 1994 my husband Rusty and I moved back to Charlottesville to raise our family, and in 1997 I was hired to create the counseling program at

St. Anne’s-Belfield School... ” (www.shiningsul-tra.blogspot.com)Frank Wickers (Ed.D. ’74) has been retired for one year now after 46 years with the Commonwealth of Virginia in a variety of posi-tions. ... He is enjoying retirement and staying very active. ... “A lot to be thankful for!”Richard “Mike” Yates (M.Ed. ’75) retired as a guidance counselor in 2009 from Colonial Heights High School after 34 years...

1990sJeff Doyle (M.Ed. ’94, Ph.D. ’01) is the dean of student learning and engagement at Baylor University in Waco, Texas...Penny Bach Evins (M.Ed. ’96) is in her first year as head of St Paul’s School for Girls in Baltimore, Md. “I just visited with Liza Wallace Becker and Frank Becker, both Curry friends.”Dana Levitt (M.Ed. ’95, Ph.D. ’01) recent-ly published Values and Ethics in Counseling: Real-Life Ethical Decision Making with Holly Hartwig Moorhead (Routledge). She is serving a third year and second term as treasurer on the CACREP board of directors.Lori Ann Willy (M.Ed. ’99) is a human resources generalist for U.Va. College of Arts & Sciences. She just celebrated 26 years of service here.

2000s & 10sMakenzie (Walstrom) Crawford (M.Ed. ’12) married Jacob Crawford on March 2, 2013, in Batesburg, S.C. ...The couple met in 2010 on Makenzie’s first day of graduate school at Curry and currently reside in Charlottesville, where Makenzie is an elementary school counselor.Petra Jauregui (M.Ed. ’07) works remotely for U.Va. from Boise, Id. She serves as a liaison for UVaClubs and alumni activity on the U.S. West Coast, Asia, Australia and Latin America.Wim Taylor (M.Ed. ’00) works at American University in the Kogod Center for Career Development in an Employer Relations role. He recently opened Elephant in the Room Consulting, a practice focused on serving fami-lies and their students who want to truly maxi-mize the college experience...

Submit your class note at curry.virginia.edu/classnotes/submit

Read more. Most entries were abbrevi-ated due to space limitations. See com-plete class notes and submitted photos at curry.virginia.edu/couns-ed-newsletter

2 FA L L 2 0 1 3 • C O U N S E L O R E D U C AT I O N

CLASS NOTESEfforts to “create” include devel-oping and implementing culturally informed strategies for counseling school-aged youth.

The program seeks to “transform” the lives of youth by implementing student-focused, data-supported approaches for meeting the per-sonal, social, academic, and career needs of students.

In speaking of this vision, Dr. Williams said, “It is my hope to build on the rich tradition this program has offered by continuing to promote excellence in counseling and counselor training.

“The University of Virginia counsel-ing program is nationally known and has produced many of the national and international leaders in our field. My goals are to connect our cur-rent students with those leaders and develop the new leaders needed to advance a growing profession.”

The program will host a UVA Counselor Education program alumni gathering at the 2013 ACES national conference in Denver, Colo., on October 18 from 5:30pm to 6:30pm.

Dr. Williams is also a member of the 2016 CACREP Standards Revision Committee, which is charged with writing the next set of training stan-dards for all accredited counseling programs.

Curry’s program has four full-time faculty members, three of whom are core faculty: Dr. Harris, Dr. Thomas, and Dr. Williams. Dr. Amanda Flora was hired as a full-time assistant pro-fessor on a one-year appointment.

The faculty has begun to recruit prospective students throughout the state of Virginia. The program will hold five information sessions during the 2013 fall semester. Recruiting sessions will be held in the Shenandoah Valley, Hampton Roads, northern Virginia, Richmond, and at the University of Virginia.

The program is also seeking to hire additional core faculty this year to support the program’s research efforts, teaching, and recruiting.

—continued from page 1

Page 3: Counselor Education Alumni Newsletter 2013

Read more about Bailey, including the top three things he wishes all school counselors knew: curry.virginia.edu/couns-ed-newsletter

In 1986 Deryl Bailey was a guidance counselor in a western North Carolina high school, and he was fed up with all

the negative academic statistics for young black males. He couldn’t seem to work hard enough or long enough to make a dent in those num-bers. Then he had an idea.

Bailey called a meeting with all the black males in his school, showed them the national and local statistics, and told them, “Nobody can change that but you. What do you need?” It had a slow start, but that was the beginning of Gentlemen on the Move, a program providing academic support for youth that thrives today in the Clarke County, Georgia, region.

Now an associate professor of counsel-ing and human development services at The University of Georgia, Bailey has been passion-ate about the subject of school counseling since his own negative experiences as a youth.

“I didn’t get the attention, direction, and guid-ance I needed in public schools,” Bailey says. “I don’t want that to happen to anyone else.”

Bailey loved working with students in schools. “What some kids went through and were able to overcome excited me, inspired me, and encouraged me to want to do more,” he says.

When he decided to pursue an advance degree in counseling, he chose the Curry School because Courtland Lee was on the faculty at the time. Bailey had read Lee’s three-volume series Empowering Young Black Males, and he connected with Lee’s ideas.

Bailey earned an education specialist degree and then a Ph.D. “Courtland introduced me to so many leaders in the counseling field and really set my task. Those people continue to be mentors, cheerleaders, and even co-authors since my doctoral program,” he says.

He also discovered that counselor education was not necessarily about teaching classes so much as it is about professional training. It was a career path that would enable him to influence the profession while maintaining the flexibility to continue his work with youth.

When Bailey came to Charlottesville, he started a Gentlemen on the Move group in the Waynesboro school where his wife Mary was a teacher. The program was a major attraction to the University of Georgia when Bailey was recruited in 1999, he says. “They wanted me to start the program there.”

Since then, he has distinguished himself as a scholar and a leader in the field. He has also created a program for girls (Young Women Scholars) and for parents of youth. Empowered Youth Programs (EYP) is the umbrella name for the slate of available programs.

He has served a term as president of the Association for Counselor Education and Supervision and has amassed a host of awards. In 2012, he spent the spring semester at Seattle University in Washington as the Allen Boeing Endowed Chair and Distinguished Professor of Education. He was invited primarily to give presentations on EYP and consult on the Seattle Youth Initiative.

“I loved talking about my program that I created out of passion for kids,” he says. “If I had done nothing else with my life, I realized that I had created this program that other people want to model. In a sense, I took what Courtland Lee advocated and put it into practice.”

This past year, he worked on co-author-ing with Don C. Locke the third edition of Increasing Multicultural Understanding, which was released in late September.

When he looks back over his career so far, the theme he sees running through it all is a lesson he learned from his grandmother, who raised him from the time he was six: Leave the world better than you found it.

“I want my life to matter,” he adds.

Better Than He Found ItDeryl F. Bailey (Ed.S. ’95, Ph.D. ’99)

Thank You!

Katherine M. Alfor

Maude E. Anderson

Katharine Andrew

Harold Armstrong

Nancy Artis-Caton

Dorothy W.Beard

Elizabeth W. Becker

Cynthia A. Bedell

Alta Jean Bibb

Fred H. Billups

Joseph Bradford III

Anne P. Brashear

Nancy S. Brasher

Dale L. Brittle

Elmer N. Carter

Anne E. Chapin

Karen O. Clifford

Craig R. Colvin

Lawrence C. Davis

Harriet K. Dawson

Deborah Deichman

Carol Sue Disque

Lewis H. Drew

Penny B. Evins

Martha T. Foster

Elizabeth B. Fritze

Roxann D. Garber

Ellis C. Gedney

Joseph H. Gieck

Richard C. Glover

Katherine E. Hagan

Sharon B. Hamner

Suzanne Harkness

Robin B. Harvey

Richard K. Harwood

Preston W. Hicks

Dennis R. Howard

Countess Hughes

Mary G. Hunter

Judith A. Jackson

Julie A. Jennings

Tracy M. Johnson

Jennifer H. Jones

Marilyn C. Kameen

Joanne F. Kee

Eleanor W. Kinsella

Lena R. Kite

Deborah J. Kladivko

Rosalie Kunert-Sauter

Nancy S. Lackey

Barbara B. Lacy

Robert M. Ladd

Karen B. Lanpher

Jason E. Life

Elizabeth H. Link

Elizabeth McLeod

Daniel J. Monahan

Sue R. Mullins

Edwin J. Nolan

Randy E. Norris

Virginia E. Owens-Long

Roseann Parks

Susan B. Pearman

John K. Pegues IV

Rosalie P. Perry

James R. Pitman

Jennifer S. Purcell

Aldon Purdham Sr.

Selena L. Rave

George E. Reynolds

Henry G. Rhone

Pamela D. Rini

Timothy B. Roberts

Elizabeth Salgado

Heather L. Saskas

Colleen Schroeder

Donna G. Shank

Meredith K. Sherrill

Elizabeth Simpson

Donald S. Stanton

Anne T. Steen

David P. Steinke

Mary W. Stout

Mary Ann Stripling

Jacqueline Sullivan-

Smoot

Joyce A. Thatcher

Cecil Thompson III

Michelle Thomson

Joanne L. Toby

Dane J. Toler

Jacquelyn Tulloch

Francis S. Turnage

Michael A. Turner

Maria E. Vierling

Mary Lee T. Webb

Mary H. Weybright

Frank C. Wickers

Dona M. Wylie

3C O U N S E L O R E D U C AT I O N • FA L L 2 0 1 2

The Curry School Foundation recognizes the generosity of the following Counselor Ed alumni who made donations over the past year:

Page 4: Counselor Education Alumni Newsletter 2013

George McMahon (M.Ed. ‘96) is an assistant professor in the Counseling and Development Program at

George Mason University. Dr. McMahon is beginning his tenth year

as a counselor educator, focusing on prepar-ing school counselors and working with doctoral students. His professional interests include school counseling, multiculturalism and privilege, and group work, and he has published several journal articles and book chapters in those areas.

Most recently, Dr. McMahon has devel-oped The Ecological Model of School Counseling, which will be published in The Journal of Counseling and Development in 2013-14. In addition to teaching and research, Dr. McMahon presents regularly at state, regional, and national conferences, and collaborates with several school districts in order to promote effective use of school counselors in order to help all students be successful.

Dr. McMahon has also led trainings on various topics including multicultural

competence, privilege, leadership, use of data in schools, developing effective school counseling programs, and teaming and col-laboration.

Speaker Bio: George McMahon2013 School Counseling Summit

The Curry Alumni Magazine

CONTRIBUTE. PARTICIPATE.

ENGAGE. Read your story here:

curry.virginia.edu/magazine

Dr. McMahon will speak on the topic of Privilege at the second annual Curry School Counseling Summit on Monday, November 4, 2013, from 12-3 p.m. in Bavaro Hall. Space is limited, so email [email protected] with your full name to reserve your seat.

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COUNSELORA Newsletter for Alumni of Curry School Programs in Counselor EducationP.O. Box 400268417 Emmet Street SouthCharlottesville, VA 22904-4268

4 FA L L 2 0 1 3 • C O U N S E L O R E D U C AT I O N

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