|
As budgets tighten, counselors need all the help they can get in the fight to
keep at-risk teens from going over the edge. This manual helps you enlist
teachers as your allies and train them to help students effectively and
safely. In the first part of the book, youll learn how to prepare to sell
teachers on the helping concept. In the second part of the book,
youll find all you need for a one-day in-service in which you explain
the helping concept, listen to teacher concerns, admit the pitfalls and stress
the importance of professional training in helping skills. In the third part of
the manual, youll find a series of in-services that teach basic helping
skills, how to help students safely, and how to apply helping skills to various
problems. The author is available for training the
trainer workshops.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part One: Preparation for the Trainer
The career development of teachers
How to get teachers to believe in their role as helpers
Why teachers resist the teacher-as-helper role
Why some counselors resist teachers taking on a helper role
Why some parents resist teachers taking on a helper role
Assessing your strengths, skills, and liabilities as a trainer of teachers
Using the training sessions to model helping skills for teachers
Training cycles of the teacher-as-helper project
Purpose of the exercises used during training
Facilitating the in-service training
Overseeing the training arrangements
Building a network to support the training
Building your own personal support network
Promoting the notion of natural alliescounselors,
teachers, and peer helpers
Promoting good self-care for teacher helpers
Clarifying your vision
Part Two: Making the Case for the Teacher-As-Helper Model (A One-Day
Introductory Seminar)
Goals for your one-day introductory seminar
Schedule for your one-day introductory seminar
Training Goal 1: To give teachers data about the growing problem of
troubled teenagers in our schools
Training Goal 2: To get teachers to consider the impact of this data on
teachers and schools
Training Goal 3: To get teachers to say something must be done
about the problem
Training Goal 4: To offer teachers a solution to the problemtraining
teachers as helpers
Training Goal 5: To acknowledge that teachers have legitimate arguments
against the teacher-as-helper role
Training Goal 6: To get teachers to see that the teacher-as-helper role has
more benefits than disadvantages
Training Goal 7: To acknowledge that the teacher-as-helper training model
is controversial
Training Goal 8: To get teachers to admit that there are hazards and risks
to the teacher-as-helper role and that, therefore, teachers need
training
Training Goal 9: To get teachers to acknowledge the power of the
teacher-as-helper role by tapping into their personal experiences as
teenagers
Training Goal 10: To get teachers to sign up for teacher-as-helper
training
Part Three: Training Teachers to Use Their Helping and Advisory Skills (A
Two-Day In-Service)
Overview of your two-day in-service
Schedule for your two-day in-service
Unit 1: Training Teachers in the Teacher-Student Helping
Relationship
- Skill 1: Making the initial contact with students
- Skill 2: Making a helping contract and setting boundaries for the
helping relationship
- Skill 3: Holding a helping conversation
- Skill 4: Ending the helping relationship
Unit 2: Training Teachers to Be Effective Listeners
- Skill 1: Getting ready and set to hear the student
- Skill 2: Being an empathetic listener
Unit 3: Training Teachers to Teach Students to Make Feeling Statements
and to Send Effective Messages When They Need Help
- Skill 1: Teaching students to make I feel
statements
- Skill 2: Teaching students to send effective messages when they need
help
Unit 4: Training Teachers to Teach Students Effective Problem-Solving
Techniques
- Skill 1: Teaching students to identify their problems
- Skill 2: Teaching students to gather information
- Skill 3: Teaching students to brainstorm alternatives
- Skill 4: Teaching students to evaluate alternatives and make a
decision
- Skill 5: Teaching students to take action
- Skill 6: Teaching students to evaluate decisions
Unit 5: Training Teachers to Teach Students to Resolve Conflicts
- Skill 1: Teaching students that conflict is a normal part of everyday
life
- Skill 2: Teaching students how they currently resolve conflicts
- Skill 3: Teaching students to develop alternative ways to resolve
conflicts
- Skill 4: Supporting students when they try out new strategies to resolve
conflicts
Unit 6: Training Teachers to Make Good Referrals
- Skill 1: Learning when and how to refer
- Skill 2: Learning where to refer
- Skill 3: Coordinating resources for students who have been referred to
outside agencies
Part Four: Training Teachers to Identify the Hazards and Risks Involved in
the Teacher-As-Helper Role (A One-Day In-Service)
Overview of Your One-Day In-Service
Schedule for Your One-Day In-Service
Unit 7: Training Teachers to Be Aware of the Hazards and Risks Involved
in the Teacher Helper Role
- Skill 1: Remaining aware that there are hazards and risks involved in
helping students
- Skill 2: Remaining aware that every teacher helper is at risk of
crossing over professional boundaries
Unit 8: Training Teachers to Avoid the Hazards and Risks Involved
in the Teacher Helper Role
- Skill 1: Identifying the hazards and risks involved in the teacher helper
role
- Skill 2: Avoiding the hazards and risks involved in the teacher helper
role
Part Five: Training Teachers to Apply the Teacher-As-Helper Model
(A One-and-a-Half-Day In-Service)
Overview of Your One-and-a-Half-Day In-Service
Schedule for Your One-and-a-Half-Day In-Service
Unit 9: Training Teachers to Help Students with School Problems
- Skill 1: Helping students identify school problems
- Skill 2: Helping students set objectives to successfully solve school
problems
- Skill 3: Helping students meet their objectives
Unit 10: Training Teachers to Help Students with Family Crises
- Skill 1: Helping students identify family problems
- Skill 2: Helping students learn from faulty family communication
patterns
- Skill 3: Helping students learn to deal with family conflict
Unit 11: Training Teachers to Help Students with Peer Problems Caused
by Intergroup Hostility
- Skill 1: Helping students identify peer problems caused by intergroup
hostility
- Skill 2: Helping students resolve peer problems and learn to live
together
Unit 12: Training Teachers to Support Students Dealing with Death and
Loss
- Skill 1: Learning how to set up a support system for students dealing
with death and loss
- Skill 2: Helping students dealing with death and loss to examine their
feelings and attitudes and to understand the stages of grief
- Skill 3: Encouraging students who have experienced death and loss to
help peers
Unit 13: Training Teachers to Help Students with Suicide Issues
- Skill 1: Learning to be informed about suicide issues
- Skill 2: Learning when to intervene to help a student who may be
suicidal
- Skill 3: Learning how to provide follow-up support for students who
have considered suicide
Unit 14: Training Teachers to Help Students with Child Abuse Issues
- Skill 1: Learning how to identify child abuse
- Skill 2: Learning how to intervene in child abuse cases
- Skill 3: Learning the importance of taking professional responsibility in
child abuse cases
Unit 15: Training Teachers to Help Students with Eating Disorders
- Skill 1: Learning that eating disorders are serious student health
problems
- Skill 2: Identifying students with eating disorders
- Skill 3: Helping students with eating disorders
Unit 16: Training Teachers to Help Students with Tobacco, Alcohol,
and Drug Abuse Problems
- Skill 1: Learning that tobacco, alcohol, and drug abuse are serious
student health problems
- Skill 2: Identifying students who have tobacco, alcohol and drug abuse
problems
- Skill 3: Helping students who have tobacco, alcohol, and drug abuse
problems
Part Six: Training Teachers to Train Themselves (A Half-Day
In-Service)
Overview of Your Half-Day In-Service
Schedule for Your Half-Day In-Service
Unit 17: Training Teachers to Train Themselves: Continuing Development
As Teacher Helpers
Appendix: Sample Evaluation Form, Award Certificate, and Press Release
Bibliography
About the Author
Following is the introduction to The Teacher-As-Helper Training
Manual. All rights reserved. Copyright © 1998, Resource
Publications, Inc.
Introduction
Welcome to the teacher-as-helper training program.
Your situation may be something like this: You are a concerned secondary
school educatoran administrator, guidance counselor or teacher
leader. You have been given the task of empowering and training teachers
in your high school, junior high, or middle school to take on the role of
advisor and helper with their students. Your school district, like many others
in America, is under siege, trying to cope with the growing number of
teenagers with serious personal problems. Many parents, students,
community residents, teachers and administrators are concerned that these
problems are out of control and are overwhelming the resources of the
district. They are alarmed. They want the problem addressed and solved.
Everyone in the school community agrees that something must be
done.
In response, the Board of Education and school superintendent have come
up with a plan to confront the problem. The plans main focus is to
prepare secondary teachers to become helpers for their troubled students.
The superintendent will use the annual spring staff development
conference to urge all secondary school teachers to volunteer to serve as
helpers and advisors for their students. This coming summer, a cadre of
interested teachers will be trained to be teacher helpers. When the new
school year begins in September, this cadre of newly trained teacher
helpers will be expected to help students with their non-academic problems
as well as their academics. The school superintendent has informed
secondary school administrators that empowering and training teachers to
be effective helpers will be the school districts top priority for the
coming school year. The superintendent is putting the full force of his office
behind the project.
You have been picked to head up the teacher helper training program. But
before the training begins, you must convince the teaching staff,
counselors, and parents that helping is a good idea. You know that if
teachers dont buy into the teacher helper concept, no amount of
skills training will do any good. The Board of Education and superintendent
can urge teachers to volunteer for the training, but it will be a wasted effort
if the teachers just go through the motions and dont make a real
commitment.
As a concerned educator who is seen as an innovator in the district, you
support the teacher helper project. Certainly it is controversial, but where
else are the resources going to come from? You know the classroom
teacher is the person best positioned to observe students headed for
trouble and intervene before problems get out of hand. In your daily work,
you observe more and more teenagers coming into the schools with
problems related to alcohol, drug and tobacco abuse; sexual diseases;
family crisis; divorce; physical and sexual abuse; neglect; eating disorders;
violence; and suicide. You know these problems are having a powerful
negative impact on the entire school community. Students, teachers,
support staff and beleaguered administrators and counselors tell you they
are alarmed and looking for new approaches that will help them to get on
top of these problems. As one administrator said, I want to return the
school to being a place where teaching and learning are once again the
top priority. If we dont solve this problem, the public is going to boot
us all out.
You believe this administrator is right on target. In the community, more and
more concerned citizens are questioning the ability of the schools to handle
this surge in teenage problems. The guidance staff in particular is being
singled out for failing to mount an effective response. The counselors,
while agreeing with the concerns of these citizen groups, say they are
overwhelmed and need more staff to solve these problems. But some
community groups are mounting efforts to block any budget approval to hire
more counselors in this time of limited resources. They want action but not
at an additional cost and tax burden. Your school superintendent, like a
growing number of superintendents in America, believes the way to go is to
get teachers on board as helpers and train them in how to intervene when
troubled students come into their classrooms. Hiring more counselors will
not get the job done. There are too many students with problems. Other
approaches have to be found that use the creative resources and skills
of staff now in place. The superintendent believes that every teacher can
be empowered and trained to be an effective helper. If every teacher gets
involved, no student will fall through the cracks.
You have been given the task of training teachers in your school because
you have a reputation as an education reformer. You are a person who is
trusted by the teaching staff and can motivate them to change. As an
ex-teacher, you are seen by teachers as one of them. Even though you are
out of the classroom, many teachers believe you still understand how it
feels to be a teacher in the trenches. You are also an
effective mediator and know how to overcome resistance and get people
on board the change process. But you are not naive. Changing long-held
beliefs and practices, especially in this time of limited resources and
mounting public criticism of the schools, will require a great deal of difficult
communication and an effective presentation of the materials. You know
many teachers are going to resist taking on this new role. They will tell you
that they have enough to do now and that helping needy students with
personal problems is not their job. They were not trained in graduate school
to be helpers and no amount of training will make them feel comfortable.
Getting them to buy into this new role as helper will be no easy task.
The guidance staff is not going to be overjoyed with the plan to train
teachers to be helpers, either. They will say that their jobs are in jeopardy
and that this plan is really a plot to send them packing. Convincing
counselors that this plan will solidify their important helping role in the
schools by presenting them with the opportunity to play a leadership role in
training teachers as helpers will also not be easy.
Some parents will resist. They will say they dont want teachers with
a little training in helping getting involved with their kids personal
lives.
You have got your work cut out for you. But dont start feeling
overwhelmed. It is a good thing to know the obstacles and identify the hard
work that lies ahead. My research in school reform efforts has convinced
me that most projects that involve a change in the way teachers
work is organized fail in the implementation stage. Why? Because the
project leaders fail to take into account the depth of teacher resistance to
new approaches. They fail to mount an effective campaign to get teachers
on board. When teachers fire back and resist change, most innovators and
reformers run for cover. They have not been trained in how to behave in
the heat of battle. The fireworks usually start when abstract ideas, such as
teachers being helpers, move into the reality phase. When teachers come
face to face with what is really involved and how their workday and routine
might change, be prepared for resistance and mischief-making! Attending
an in-service about an idea to train teachers as helpers and actually buying
into the process and implementing the program are two different things.
Remember, people like to talk about change as long as it doesnt get
too close to home and begin to affect their work day.
This manual will help you to prepare for this task. When teachers,
counselors, and parents begin to mount resistance to this project, you
will know how to meet this resistance head-on and proceed. Your job is to
convince teachers that being helpers for students is an idea whose time
has come and that, with proper training, they can do the job. In fact,
teachers who learn how to help become more effective teachers
overall.
The training program is divided as such:
- Part One: Pre-in-service self-training guide to help you prepare for the
training.
- Part Two: A one-day introductory seminar to help you make the case
for the teacher-as-helper model and get teachers on board for the
training.
- Parts Three through Six: A five-day training for teachers to help them
become effective teacher helpers.
Training schedules are provided for the one-day introductory seminar and
for each of the training units in the five-day training. The five-day training
schedule presents a series of in-services to be completed in one week,
Monday through Friday, though you may adapt this to suit your needs.
This plan may be controversial, but it is well suited to address the current
problems of students. Your ultimate goal is to get the needy students in
your school the help they need. By mobilizing teachers as helpers to
accomplish this goal, you will help teachers and counselors feel more
effective. They will begin to have an increased pride in their ability to
help their students, their school, and themselves. That is your focus. Keep
your eye on that ball. This training manual is designed to help you stay
focused. I show you how to proceed by leading you through the
Teacher-As-Helper In-Service Training Course. I guarantee that you will be
prepared to get teachers and counselors on board and train them to be
effective helpers when you have completed this manual.
You are about to embark on a very important project. There are more than
nineteen million teenagers currently at-risk in America. If you are
successful as a trainer, your cadre of well-trained teacher helpers will be
able to intervene and help many at-risk teens who now go without help.
|
|