Thursday, October 22, 2009

SWK 370 (CSL 597) – International Social Work – The Netherlands

SWK 370 (CSL 597) – International Social Work – The Netherlands
The travel portion of this course will be during Spring Break – February 28- March 7, 2010

INFORMATION SESSIONS TO BE HELD NEXT WEEK
On the following dates and times:
1st Wed., Oct. 28, 3:30-4:30 pm
or
2nd Fri., Oct. 30, 11-12:00 pm
In the Moran Hall Conference Room (the white house next to St. Joseph’s Auditorium)
For further information please contact Dr. Richard Pulice at pulicer@strose.edu -454-5251

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

School Counselors, consider attending!

http://www.guidanceexpos.net/index.html

Another great elective this Spring!!!

Pat Bradway, Psy.D.

pbradway@siena.edu (day)

pbradway@fairpoint.net (evenings and weekends)

Course Description

Eating Disorder Prevention, Assessment, and Treatment

Anorexia Nervosa, Bulimia Nervosa and Binge Eating Disorder will be the primary disordered eating patterns examined in this course. Assessment measures, empirically validated treatments, and prevention methods will be discussed. Although disordered eating across the life span will be considered, early adolescence through young adulthood will be emphasized. Special topics might include the co-occurrence of deliberate self-harm and eating disorders, dual diagnosis, special populations such as athletes, the impact of gender and socio-cultural factors on disordered eating symptoms and the incidence of eating disorders. The course is appropriate for students who are preparing to work in schools as teachers, administrators or as clinicians.

The format of class meetings will be seminar. Responsibility for leading class discussions will be rotated. Students are expected to complete assigned reading before class and to engage in discussion during class. Major assignments will include a presentation on a prevention program and a final paper integrating class readings.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Center for Citizenship, Race and Ethnicity Studies

Dr. Kennedy will speak on "Creating a Framework for Social Justice and Equity in the Training of Counselors and Student Affairs Professionals" on Tuesday, October 27th, from noon to 1 p.m. in Standish Conference Room 3. Bring your lunch & join her for this informative lunchtime talk!

NYS Provisional Certification for School Counseling Students

In their last semester of graduate study, school counseling students should apply to NYSED for provisional certification through the TEACH system. Links & instructions can be found here:

http://www.strose.edu/academics/schoolofeducation/fieldplacementandadvisement

Preview: CSL 597 Expressive Arts Elective Offered Spring 2010

Taught by Joan Horgan

Have you ever felt stuck when working with a client? Would you like to expand your repertoire of options in when counseling individuals or with groups? Expressive Arts and Counseling is an experiential course designed to help counseling students explore how the various forms of artistic expression – drawing, painting, sculpture, writing, drama, movement and music, can be used in group and individual counseling.

The course will focus on the inter modal use of multiple forms of art expression as a vehicle to deepening participant’s awareness of their inner experiences and creatively integrating those experiences as they move through life. Students will learn to apply what is learned through the class to the work they are being prepared to do in various settings and capacities out in the wider community (such as school, college and community mental health settings). We will also explore how the arts lend themselves to being used with various populations and issues individuals might bring to the counseling setting.

You do not have to be artistically “talented” in order to benefit from this course. The way that art is used is as a vehicle for gathering information and so the quality of any particular work or art is much less important than what it conveys to the person who created it. The use of the various art forms gives students a chance to experiment with different possibilities and comfort zones and increases our capacity to be effective with our clients.

This course will be taught over a series of four weekends meeting Friday evening from 6-9pm and Saturday from 10am-5:30pm. The weekend dates are: January 22-23rd, February 12-13th, March 19-20th, and April 9-10th. (As you might guess from this format, it is necessary to be able to attend each weekend since missing one would mean you were absent for one fourth of the course.)

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Medicare Coverage for LMHC's please advocate!!

Ask Senator Charles Schumer to vote YES on

Medicare coverage of Licensed Mental Health Counselors!

This TUESDAY, September 22nd, the Senate Finance Committee will start voting on health insurance reform legislation, including major Medicare changes. Your Senator Charles Schumer is on the committee, and we need him to VOTE YES on the Lincoln Amendment to establish Medicare coverage of licensed mental health counselors (LMHCs) and marriage and family therapists (MFTs).

The health bill introduced by Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus unfortunately does NOT include counselor coverage. Senator Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) is expected to offer an amendment to include counselor Medicare coverage in the bill, and we need Senator Schumer and as many other Senators as possible to vote for the Lincoln Amendment.

ACA and AMHCA have been working to gain Medicare coverage of counselors for a long, long time, and we need Senator Schumer to know that his constituents in New York—meaning you!—support including Medicare coverage of counselors in the legislation he will be voting on next week. LMHCs are well-trained, qualified, cost-effective mental health professionals, and should be covered under Medicare. The Senate has already approved counselor Medicare coverage legislation in both 2003 and 2005, and with the increasing size of the beneficiary population, counselor coverage is an even better idea now.

Please take a moment to do one or more of the following:

1. Call Senator Schumer’s office in Washington DC—at 202-224-6542—and ask to talk to an aide who handles Medicare issues. Whether you talk to this person or are asked by the receptionist to leave a message, describe in your own words why Medicare should cover licensed mental health counselors, and ask the Senator to vote YES on Senator Lincoln’s amendment to establish Medicare coverage of counselors and marriage and family therapists. The amendment would improve Medicare beneficiaries’ access to outpatient mental health services. Be sure to leave your name and postal address so that the Senator can get back to you.

2. Send Senator Schumer an e-mail conveying the same message. You can do this by visiting the Senator’s webpage at http://schumer.senate.gov/new_website/contact.cfm.

3. Call one of Senator Schumer’s offices in the state near you, and talk to a staff member as in #1. His district office phone numbers are as follows:

New York 212-486-4430

Buffalo 716-846-4111

Rochester 585-263-5866

Albany 518-431-4070

Binghamton 607-772-6792

Syracuse 315-423-5471

Peekskill 914-734-1532

Melville 631-753-0978

Thank you in advance for your time and assistance; it could make the difference between success or failure on this issue!

For more information contact either Scott Barstow with the American Counseling Association at sbarstow@counseling.org (800-347-6647 x234) or Julie Clements with the American Mental Health Counselors Association at jclements@amhca.org.

Scott Barstow

Director of Public Policy and Legislation

American Counseling Association

5999 Stevenson Avenue

Alexandria, VA 22304

703.823.9800 x234
703.405.9711 (cell)

703.823.0252 (fax)
800.347.6647 x234
703.823.6828 TDD
sbarstow@counseling.org
www.counseling.org