AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

Promoting systemic change through the ACA Advocacy Competencies.(Special Section: Advocacy Competence)(American Counseling Association)(Report)

Journal of Counseling and Development

| June 22, 2009 | Toporek, Rebecca L.; Lewis, Judith A.; Crethar, Hugh C. | COPYRIGHT 2009 American Counseling Association. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Counselors have always been change agents and advocates (Kiselica & Robinson, 2001; Lewis & Bradley, 2000; Toporek, Gerstein, Found, Roysircar, & Israel, 2006). They have recognized that their clients and students often needed more than what face-to-face counseling could provide. They have felt a responsibility to make the environment more conducive to positive human development. In most cases, however, these courageous counselors have had to act on their own, without professional resources and without guidance for ethical and effective implementation of the advocacy role. In 2003, the Governing Council of the American Counseling Association (ACA) moved to mend this gap, adopting a set of competencies to provide practitioners and counselor educators with guidelines for the competent practice of client/student advocacy (Lewis, Arnold, House, & Toporek, 2002). These competencies are grounded in the often unrecognized legacy of advocacy within the counseling profession. This article highlights some key advocacy movements within counseling and describes the development of the ACA Advocacy Competencies (Lewis et al., 2002) more specifically. We elaborate on the model that forms the foundation for the Advocacy Competencies, providing specific descriptions, examples, and case studies to illustrate the real-life practice of the advocacy role.

The History of Advocacy in Counseling

When embarking on writing a history of any kind, one needs to remember that beneath the public story that is portrayed in official documents and conventional publications there is always a people's history (Zinn, 2001). It is when one attends to the people's version that one hears for the first time the narratives of heroes who are never named in the authorized version of History 101.

If history is to be creative, to anticipate a possible future without denying the past, it should, I believe, emphasize new possibilities by disclosing those hidden episodes of the past when, even if in brief flashes, people showed their ability to resist, to join together, occasionally to win. I am supposing, or perhaps only hoping, that our future may be found in the past's fugitive moments of compassion. (Zinn, 2001, p. 11)

The counseling profession has its own people's history, especially when it comes to the role of advocacy in counselors' work. Through the years that the profession has existed, there have always been career and employment counselors who fought against racism and sexism in the workplace, family counselors who brought hidden violence and abuse into the open, school counselors who sought to eliminate school-based barriers to learning, and community counselors who participated in social action on behalf of their clients. As long as there have been counselors, there have been counselor-advocates.

Unfortunately, people's history is "the most difficult kind of history to recapture" (Zinn, 2001, p. 645). We counselors will not be able to retrieve the names of all the quiet heroes of our profession. We honor them, however, by continuing their work.

Although advocacy has always been a part of the real-life practice of counselors, it is only in recent years that it has been widely accepted as being at the core of their professional identity. The fact that the Advocacy Competencies have been created and disseminated by ACA solidifies this professional recognition. Counselors must acknowledge, however, that the acceptance of advocacy as central to competent practice represents not a single event but rather the culmination of a process that gained energy in the last few decades of the 20th century. Several seemingly separate trends have converged in a nonlinear fashion to bring the counseling profession to where it is today. In particular, we highlight the development and implementation of the Multicultural Counseling Competencies (MCCs; Sue, Arredondo, & McDavis, 1992), the rise of the Transforming School Counseling Initiative (TSCI), the progress of the counseling licensure movement, the creation of Counselors for Social Justice (CSJ), and the implementation of advocacy initiatives within ACA.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
ACA Advocacy Competencies: social justice advocacy at the client/student...
Magazine article from: Journal of Counseling and Development Ratts, Manivong J. Hutchins, A. Michael June 22, 2009 700+ words
...and feminist and multicultural counseling literature (Goodman...Counseling Association) Advocacy Competencies (Lewis, Arnold, House...student level of the Advocacy Competencies can meet the growing...the importance of the Advocacy Competencies, provides an overview...
The ACA advocacy competencies: a social justice advocacy framework for...
Magazine article from: Professional School Counseling Ratts, Manivong J. DeKruyf, Lorraine Chen-Hayes, Stuart F. December 1, 2007 700+ words
...recent endorsement of the advocacy competencies by the American Counseling...counselors can use the advocacy competencies as a framework for promoting...educators in using the advocacy competencies are also addressed...
Making a difference; advocacy competencies for special education professionals,...
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News November 1, 2008 700+ words
9781416403777 Making a difference; advocacy competencies for special education professionals, 2d ed. Fiedler...education and categorize the essential professional advocacy competencies into important types of dispositions (e.g. ethical...
Developing multicultural counseling competencies through experiential learning....
Magazine article from: Counselor Education and Supervision Arthur, Nancy Achenbach, Kathleen September 1, 2002 700+ words
...The recent attention paid to multicultural counseling competencies has defined domains...to support the development of multicultural counseling competencies have received less...methodology to increase students' multicultural counseling competencies. The authors outline...
The influence of multicultural training on perceived multicultural counseling...
Magazine article from: Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development Castillo, Linda G. Brossart, Daniel F. Reyes, Carla J. Conoley, Collie W. Phoummarath, Marion J. October 1, 2007 700+ words
...impact of multicultural training on multicultural counseling competencies and implicit racial...analysis showed that only the multicultural counseling course was related to a decrease...30 years, the Association for Multicultural Counseling and Development has provided leadership...
Matters of the heart and matters of the mind: exploring the history, theories,...
Magazine article from: Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development Kiselica, Mark S. April 1, 2005 700+ words
Handbook of Multicultural Counseling, second edition, by...publications pertaining to multicultural counseling. In an effort to systematize...edition of the Handbook of Multicultural Counseling, which is considered...
The relationship between racial identity development and multicultural...
Magazine article from: Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development Vinson, Teraesa S. Neimeyer, Gregory J. October 1, 2003 700+ words
...racial identity development and multicultural counseling competency across a 2-year period...Significant increases were found in multicultural counseling competency but not in their levels...Tarver, 1989, p. 266), and multicultural counseling competency, or "counseling that...
A 40-year review of multicultural counseling outcome research: outlining a...
Magazine article from: Journal of Counseling and Development D'Andrea, Michael Heckman, Elizabeth Foster June 22, 2008 700+ words
The multicultural counseling movement is clearly transforming...challenges that have moved the multicultural counseling paradigm from its infancy...fundamental ways that the multicultural counseling movement has affected and...
For more facts and information, see all results
©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA