Showing posts with label advising. Show all posts
Showing posts with label advising. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

2014, Week 3, Winter Q

Career Services


Gina Anselmo now has an on-site advising day in the College of Education on Thursdays from 2-5pm.  Her office is located in the Dean's Suite, Office 213
For more information click here

Additionally, Peer Advising Resume services are now avaliable. Click here for more information.

Dr. Gnilka Advising Sessions

Tuesday, Feb. 4 & Thursday, Feb. 6
4-5pm
Student Center 324


Careers on Purpose: Taking Control of your Success

When: 5-7pm on Sunday, February 9th, 2014
Where: Lincoln Park Student Center 324

You have the counseling skills. You are smart, capable, and ready to go. Now what? How do you get the job after you graduate? How do you set yourself up for success while in school?

Learn how to break past your internal barriers, build the foundation for success while you are in school, and gain concrete networking skills in an interactive environment. Begin a journey through the skills and attitudes that your program might not have taught you and walk away empowered to create your own path.


Rena McDaniel, a DePaul Alumni (class of 2013), is currently serving as the Director of Outreach and Operations, as well as a staff therapist, at IntraSpectrum Counseling. Less than a year after graduating, she has gotten a director position at a private practice, presented to a room of 60+ professionals at a local hospital, been asked to do a training for a consortium of interns of three major LGBTQ organizations, developed and serves at head of the coaching department for Fortune Training & Coaching, and has a standing coffee date with Viktor Frankl’s grandson!

COE Winter Forum 2014

SCHOOL FUNDING REFORM:  CLOSING THE "OPPORTUNITY GAP"

Tuesday, February 11; 5:30 to 7:30 PM
DePaul Student Center, Room 314



Ralph Martire, the Director of the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability, a well-known and respected state and national policy expert will present a critical analysis of the state of public school funding in Chicago and Illinois.  Martire will discuss issues of adequacy and equity in funding and offer solutions to the question of how we can pay for the education all children deserve.

In an era of  budget cuts, teacher layoffs, the erosion of programs and services for children, and increasing inequity in resources, the forum will offer students a deeper understanding of the challenges and possibilities of providing a well-resourced quality education for all children.

We must as a nation, and in our states, launch a renewed effort to eliminate the stubborn and persistent resource disparities and inadequacies that drag down American public schools. Now is the time to take the bold and courageous action to make certain that all of our students have access to the meaningful educational opportunities that they and the nation must secure. (Martire, "The Fair Funding Challenge")

2 CPDUs are available for teachers.

Resources for your students:

Mr. Martire serves on the U.S. Department of Education's Equity and Excellence in Education Commission. Attached is their recent report:  For Each and EveryChild (See Improving School Finance and Efficiency, pp. 17 -20) and a compendium of recommendations. (See article # 4 The Fair Funding Challenge:  Ensuring a Meaningful Opportunity for All Students)

For more information on the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability, their resources, analysis and reports on school funding:  www.ctbaonline.org

A recent report:  Is School Funding Fair?  can be found at: 

Please share this announcement with your students and if you teach on Tuesday evenings, consider bringing your class. Please R.S.V.P. to dhorwit@depaul.edu if you plan to do so.



Wednesday, January 8, 2014

2014, Week 1, Winter Q


Athletic Academic Advising Position
Click to view the Job Description
Additional information: The position is paid through The Athlife Foundation Grant.  In addition to the attached description, the ideal candidate would have an interest in student development (counseling), athletics, and program development as well as have past experience working with high school students.  This program requires an individual who is willing to be a champion for the social and academic development of athletes in the Girls and Boys Basketball program at Westinghouse College Prep.

__________________________________________________________


SAVE THE DATE:  COLLEGE OF EDUCATION WINTER FORUM
SCHOOL FUNDING IN CHICAGO AND ILLINOIS - A CRITICAL APPRAISAL


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11TH from 5:30 to 7:30 PM


We are pleased to announce that Ralph Martire, the Executive Director of the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability will be our keynote speaker for the COE Winter Forum. Mr. Martire is a local and national expert on education finance and fiscal policy and is often called on for expert commentary on a wide variety of TV and radio shows, and in local and state papers.



Details will be forthcoming after the beginning of the new year.  This is a great opportunity for our students who are currently and will be impacted by the state's fiscal crisis and by budget cuts in Chicago and schools throughout the state to get an expert's view of the problem and what needs to be done.



Please consider building this into your winter syllabi.  For more information, contact Diane Horwitz at dhorwit1@depaul.edu.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Advising and Course Planning




Hello students. We hope the quarter is going well for you so far. We are about to start registering for the Winter 2014 quarter, and we wanted to remind you to make sure you are using the most up-to-date Course Planning Sheets.

The most up-to-date course planning sheet is always located in the Student Handbook at:

http://www.livebinders.com/play/play?id=334209

Look under Phase 1: Coursework to get to the Planning Guide.

Questions regarding your program of study and/or other advising needs should be directed as follows:

Community Counseling Students to Dr. Philip Gnilka (pgnilka@depaul.edu)
School Counseling Students to Dr. Darrick Tovar-Murray (dtovarmu@depaul.edu)
College Student Development Students to Dr. Rich Whitney (rwhitne5@depaul.edu)

Thank-you.

Philip B. Gnilka, Ph.D., NCC

Monday, September 23, 2013

2013 Week 2 Autumn Q

Autumn Quarter, Week 3, September 23-27


Important- Advising Updates for the 2013-2014 school year:

New and returning students, please be aware of these advising assignments and updates for the 2013-2014 Academic Year. 

Program Planning and Advising Sessions for New Students

Attendance at at least one of these session is required for all new students but they are also open to returning students who have advising questions or need to make adjustments to their program plans. No RSVP is required. All sessions occur during the 5th week of the quarter prior to course registration (see below for time and locations for the academic year). In order to have an assigned faculty advisor, students must attend one program planning session. Prior to attending, all students should become familiar with the Counseling Student Handbook and should bring a draft of their program plan using this guide. 

Questions regarding these sessions or advising for new students should be directed as follows:

Community Counseling Students to Dr. Philip Gnilka (pgnilka@depaul.edu
School Counseling Students to Dr. Darrick Tovar-Murray (dtovarmu@depaul.edu)
College Student Development Students to Dr. Rich Whitney (rwhitne5@depaul.edu)

*ALL SESSIONS ARE 4:00-5:00PM

FALL QUARTER:
Tuesday, October 8: Student Center 324
Thursday, October 10: Student Center 325

WINTER QUARTER:
Tuesday, February 4: Student Center 324
Thursday, February 6: Student Center, 324

SPRING QUARTER:
Tuesday, April 29: Student Center, 325
Thursday, May 1: Student Center, 325


Advising for Returning Students

Returning Students (who have taken at least 2 quarters of classes) who need advising should continue to fill out the advising request located in the Student Handbook. You will then be referred to an advisor. Issues you can contact your advisor about include (and are not limited to): thinking about writing a thesis, issues/ideas about looking for an internship site, future career issues/discussions, doctoral study, licensure, approval of an elective for your program of study, resume/letters of interest for various internship sites or jobs. Returning students only need to complete the advising/registration request when there are specific course registration issues (e.g., inability to register for a course, reviewing of your program of study). For CSD, Dr. Rich Whitney is the advisor for returning students and new students (rwhitne5@depaul.edu).

The advising request form is at the following address: 

Advising for Interns

Dr. Erin Mason (emason5@depaul.edu) will serve in the role of Professional Practice advisor for all Community and School students who are in their internship phase. Dr. Whitney (rwhitne5@depaul.edu) will continue to be the Professional Practice advisor for all CSD students. Students who are in the professional practice-phase should communicate directly with Drs. Mason or Whitney for issues regarding their internship.

* * *

Please mark your calendars for an exciting opportunity: On Wednesday, October 30th, 5:30 – 8:00pm the secondary education program/ DTE will host a screening of a new education documentary with the filmmaker, Jyllian Gunther:  

In the film, The New Public (http://www.thenewpublicmovie.com) filmmaker Jyllian Gunther followed a brand new experimental Brooklyn public high school in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of New York City through its first four years to see how its unorthodox – and highly creative – approach to educating would impact students, and to tell the story of their first graduating class. What she ended up with was a documentary that, through the prism of one school, tells the story of countless urban schools in underserved communities around the country. The film’s honest and informative look at the day-to-day challenges of creating successes in urban schools has resonated deeply with educators. (Columbia Teachers College felt so strongly about the film and its realistic look at public education, they're now creating a curriculum so the film can be used as a training tool for pre-service teachers).

Please join us (and consider bringing your classes!) for the film screening (approx. 90 minutes) followed by a discussion with the filmmaker and area educators about the issues the film raises. 

A preview of the film is available to any faculty interested in viewing it. Location and further details of the event will follow.  



* * *

Job Opportunity- Posted on behalf of Dr. Chuck Pistorio, chairperson, Counselor Education
  
Morton College
Adult Education, Community Programming & Outreach (AECPO)
3801 S. Central Ave., Cicero, IL 60804

Transition Coach
Job Description

Job Summary:  Counsel and advise Adult Basic Education, Adult Secondary Education and
Advanced ESL students about their academic program; assist them in
completing an Individual Education and Career Plan; and support them in the
various transitions they encounter as they progress through the program.

Required Qualifications:  A bachelor’s degree with coursework or related experience in
academic advising, counseling and/or social work.  Familiarity with
the needs of undereducated and disadvantaged adults.                                  

Desirable Qualifications:  A master’s degree (candidate) with experience working with disadvantaged adults; public speaking or teaching experience.

Specific Job Duties

·         Present a student orientation workshop to ABE/ASE students.
·         Administer and interpret placement tests and diagnostic assessments to students.
·         Introduce students to software programs that meet their educational needs.
·         Assist students with the completion of an Individual Education and Career Plan based on their assessment results and personal goals.
·         Help students select appropriate educational activities to meet the necessary time requirements for completion of the Preparation course.
·         Follow-up with assigned students to ensure completion of the Preparation course and the first term of leveled classes.
·         Counsel students as needed to assist them in overcoming barriers in their lives.
·         Monitor student progress and assign lessons on educational software programs as part of a student’s Preparation coursework.
·         Make placement recommendations based on placement test results, diagnostic assessments, and student performance in the educational activities selected for the Preparation course.
·         Work with students as they transition from one step of the program to another, especially when they are at the ASE level.
·         Present workshops on various topics as requested.
·         Attend required meetings and training sessions.
·         Submit student attendance records and other paperwork as required.
·         Complete professional development activities as required by ICCB/AEFL.

Schedule:  19 hours per week, for no more than 48 weeks during the year.

Please Contact:  Anna Nakashima, Assistant Dean, Morton College AECPO
                              708-656-8000, ext. 2368


* * *

Registration OPEN for ISAC FAFSA training! Recommended for School Counseling students: Please click below for information and registration
* * * 

Special Presentations at Alexian Brothers Behavioral Health
NIU Conference Center
Hoffman Estates, IL
Mindfulness for Children & Adolescents: 
Learning to Breathe

WEDNESDAY | Sept. 25, 2013
9:00 AM - 4:00 PM

6 CEUS PROVIDED - ONLY $50! 
DESCRIPTION  Mindfulness is a way of intentionally and non-judgmentally paying attention to what is occurring in the present moment. The movement to bring mindfulness to children and adolescents in schools is growing through ‘Learning to BREATHE’ (L2B), an empirically supported mindfulness curriculum designed for classrooms and similar settings. L2B addresses developmental issues, and provides skills for stress management, emotional regulation, attention and well-being. In her presentation, Dr. Broderick will discuss mindfulness research, as well as offer experiential and interactive exercises of those skills taught in this curriculum.

FACULTY  Guest presenter, Patricia (Trish) Broderick, Ph.D., is a research associate at the Penn State Prevention Research Center, and founder of the Stress Reduction Center at the Westchester University of Pennsylvania. She is a certified school psychologist, a licensed clinical psychologist, a certified school counselor, and a graduate of the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Advanced Curriculum at UMASS. The Fourth edition of her developmental psychology textbook, The Life Span: Human Development for Helping Professionals will be published in 2014. Also, Learning to BREATHE will be published in 2013.


Bridges of Poplar Creek Country Club Hoffman Estates, IL

Why People Die by Suicide

FRIDAY | Oct. 18, 2013
9:00 AM - 4:00 PM

5.5 CEUS PROVIDED - ONLY $50! 

DESCRIPTION  In his new theory of suicidal behavior, 
Dr. Thomas Joiner proposes three factors that increase the 
risk of suicide: the feeling of being a burden on loved ones; the sense of isolation; and, perhaps chillingly, the learned ability to hurt oneself. He tests the theory against diverse facts taken from clinical antidotes, history, literature, popular culture, anthropology, epidemiology, genetics and neurobiology - - facts about suicide rates among men and women; white and African-American men, anorexics, athletes, prostitutes, and physicians; member of cults, sports fans and citizens of nations in crisis.

FACULTY  Guest presenter, Thomas Joiner, Ph.D., is the Robert O Lawton Distinguished Professor in the Department of Psychology at Florida State University. His work is on the psychology, neurobiology, and treatment of suicidal behavior and related conditions. He is a consultant to NASA’s Human Research Program, and is the Director of the DoD-funded Military Suicide Research Consortium, a $30 million project. Dr. Joiner is the author of more than 475 peer-reviewed publications. He has also authored or edited 17 books, including Why People Die by Suicide (2005, Harvard University Press). His newest book, The Perversion of Virtue: Understanding Murder-Suicide will be published in 2014.