Reflection in Guidance and Counseling
Reflection in Guidance and Counseling
Reflection in Guidance and Counseling
Reynosa
I.
II-5 STA
Guidance and counseling are not synonymous although are used interchangeably. Guidance refers to the total helping process of helping individuals to develop their potentials whereas counseling is generally defined as the relationship of an individual or group who seeks help from another person who is professionally competent to give this help (FAPE, 1975). All counseling is guidance, but not all guidance is counseling. A guidance worker is not necessarily a counselor, while a counselor is necessarily guidance personnel.
The difference between guidance and counseling needs to be emphasized for two reasons. First, the functions of the two vary even if they have the same ultimate objectives. Secondly, guidance is inherent in the teaching process while counseling is not. With his training, the ordinary classroom teacher cannot be a counselor. Even a re-orientation may not make him one. But the teacher can always do guidance functions in the performance of his teaching responsibilities. This does not mean that the teacher with no formal training in counseling cannot be an effective counselor. For indeed, there are classroom teachers who are even more effective counselors than the so-called professional counselors. But they are a rare breed, counseling being a demanding professional job that requires training.
In order to cope with the growing problems of society, guidance was introduced.
IV.
In many ways, guidance is a form of assistance given to people. Parents, most of the time, assist their children grow and develop. Teachers, likewise, assist their students to learn in order to cope with the needs of the times. Other people, irrespective of professions, also give assistance to helpless people. Friends often help one another through troubled times. In a nutshell, guidance can be given by anybody, anytime and anywhere to people who are in need of such assistance. Since helping and problem solving are such common human experience, training is both solving ones problems and helping other solve theirs should be done by a person who is trained in this field. And that is the guidance counselor.
V.
guidance services. The belief that the maximum development of children is basic to the whole educational structure and to society has strong support. Confidence in the guidance services in its outcome, and a commitment to its
philosophy and principles are essential elements for its success. As the guidance service helps to fulfill many social needs, it presents an opportunity for strengthening the framework of society. The theme of this lesson deals mainly on the different philosophies and principles that will provide guidance and its role in assisting children and youth in their development and to society itself.
VI.
Guidance Services
Guidance is not a process to be disposed of in any given time. There is no time in life when children, youth, and adults take on guidance as they take on medicine. The individuals needs will change in amount and kind, but no individual yet has been so superior that he could know the necessary facts in all situations and always make the wisest interpretations and decisions from these facts. Each individual needs some type of guidance at various intervals in his life as long as he lives. For that reason, guidance services should be continuously available so that better adjustment in life and personal growth are maximized on every stage.
Education is still the most viable means for developing individual potentials for productivity, a prerequisite to self-fulfillment. In Philippine society, it is also a means for social mobility. The number of school dropouts however is staggering. Every dropout is a human resource wasted. Just like the proverbial "drop in the bucket", every dropout is a potential menace to society as his chances for gainful employment is more limited since his potentials remain undeveloped.
Evidence of this mounting concern for the gifted is found in our curriculum. The 1987 Constitution signaled the concern felt for the need to capitalize upon the capabilities of the more talented individuals.
IX.
a problem behavior. The more pronounced the behavior is, the more attention it attracts, and the greater its nuisance is to the school. This is expected, since the school maintains order and efficiency. Timidity may be just as serious from the standpoint of the childs welfare, but it will normally receive less attention in the typical school setting. It is of major importance to identify all types of behavior and to provide every child with appropriate aid and direction in accordance with his particular needs.
X.
stable individuals as well as those who are burdened, even in their young years, with fears and worries and tensions. The classroom teacher in partnership with the good counselor is an essential parts of the total guidance program, and no such program can be successful without is cooperation and participation.
The school in which the personnel philosophy is student us one that is aware of the changing times, one that continually modifies and adapts its program of experiences for the children according to their needs and their environment. In such school, the experiences are geared toward the needs of the child in his society and his culture and in his day, and when we look at the needs of children, there would seem to be little question about the necessity for person-related teachers as well as one who appreciates personnel and guidance services.
XI.
adjustment, toward full self realization and growth. The attainment of full and maximum development of each child is a matter of degree. The exceptional child requires special attention in order to realize significant progress toward this aim. The exceptional child must be identified and accommodated early in the primary grades. This will permit the appropriate structuring of educational experiences at a time when they will be most beneficial to him.
Such attention should include using the resources of the guidance services and the patience, skill and stimulation of the classroom. The child who experiences frustrations and problems of adjustment constitutes a serious challenge to the school. The imagination, ingenuity and energies of the teacher and the counselor may be extended to the child and greater progress toward self-actualization should serve as rewards to the staff for efforts expended.