Part One
I am currently a middle school math teacher who works with kids that have emotional behavior disorders. To advance my career, I am currently pursuing a Master’s degree in school counseling. My short term goal is to be a high school guidance counselor, and I have long term goals of staring a full-service consulting group that helps underprivileged or underserved students access resources and tools for personal and professional development.
As a middle school math teacher, I started to work with students with emotional and behavioral disorders. I started working with students with special needs because of my background in psychology and my interest in working in education. Teachers need an abundance of different skills and abilities, perhaps more than any other field. Communications skills help us to speak to a class collectively while also reaching individual students. We also need to interact regularly with administrators, colleagues, and parents. In addition to the communications skills teachers need, we also need organizational and planning abilities, so that we can prepare and execute lesson plans. Teachers need to be methodical in the way we work, but we also need to adapt those lesson plans and be flexible in our approach to education. Pressured to teach for standardized tests and assessments, teachers are often constrained in what they do and rarely feel we are reaching our potential or helping students do the same. One of the reasons I am shifting to counseling as a career is that I believe I can empower others through this line of work.
I see my career as a counselor as progressing in stages. First, I want to continue working in the school setting. I want to work in high school in particular, at the exact time most students start to think more seriously about their futures. Most students are frightened about the future when they do not have good guidance. Their parents might mean well and give them emotional support, but what they really need is a professional who takes into account the students’ performance in school, personality, dreams, talents, and unique opportunities. It would be my job to investigate all of the resources available to students, including resources for special populations. I also want to help students understand themselves better, by using personality tests and not just making assumptions based on their body language or behavior. Especially in high school, teenagers can be guarded in front of adults and they are also changeable. I view my role as counselor as someone who sees each student for who they are, and for who they want to be.
Long-range goals will be a continuation of my work as a high school guidance counselor. I might continue to work in the public school sector as a leader or policy analyst, but I also would consider starting my own guidance counseling company that provides consultation and services to schools, parents, and especially to underserved and underprivileged students who might not otherwise know what opportunities they have and how to pursue them.
Part Two
A) My path of career development started as a young child who was influenced by peers, parents, and my teachers. Since I was old enough to answer the question, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” I have always been interested in being a teacher. Being a teacher to me means so much more than regurgitating facts and figures. I knew that being a teacher meant that I could have an impact on the ways kids thought about themselves and the world. In addition to what we learn from our friends and family members, we are also exposed to our teachers’ unique ways of solving problems, looking at the world, or understanding reality. Teachers can be...
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