How Can They Know What They Don’t Know? The Beliefs and Experiences of Rural School Counselors about STEM Career Advising

Authors

  • Lee Edmondson Grimes Valdosta State University
  • Meagan Arrastia Arrastía-Chisholm Valdosta State University
  • Serey B. Bright Valdosta State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3776/tpre.2019.v9n1p74-90

Keywords:

rural education, rural students, school counseling, college and career advising, rural STEM

Abstract

Many factors contribute to the educational challenges students face in rural areas, including a lack of funding compared to urban and suburban schools and a lack of role models pursuing postsecondary education. School counselors in all settings are trained to provide education to students about the postsecondary options in demand. College and career counseling with students and families in rural areas requires unique understanding of the rural characteristics that shape community life and family dynamics. National attention on rural education has highlighted a particular need for advising into STEM career fields. Using a phenomenological approach, the researchers examine the beliefs and experiences of eight school counselors working in rural schools regarding their lived experiences of advising students in their rural areas about careers in STEM. Three themes about STEM-focused career development emerged from the interviews with the school counselors, a lack of opportunities and resources, challenging local influences, and ideas for much needed place-based innovations. Implications are discussed for several key players with the ability to improve and increase STEM advising for rural students. Examples include the following: for practicing school counselors, intentional career counseling efforts that include rural families; for counselor educators, the addition of rural field placements and assignments focused on rural student career needs; and for rural communities, combining the school counselor’s efforts with local business and industry to highlight and increase STEM career awareness for students and their families.

Author Biographies

Lee Edmondson Grimes, Valdosta State University

Lee Edmondson Grimes, PhD, LPC, CPCS, Certified School Counselor, is an Associate Professor of Counselor Education at Valdosta State University. Dr. Grimes serves as program coordinator for Counselor Education at VSU. Dr. Grimes worked as a school counselor for ten years before beginning her career in higher education. 

Meagan Arrastia Arrastía-Chisholm, Valdosta State University

Meagan C. Arrastía-Chisholm, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology at Valdosta State University in the Psychology, Counseling, and Family Therapy Department. Her research interests include self-regulation, diverse learners, rural education, and parental separation. mcarrastia@valdosta.edu

Serey B. Bright, Valdosta State University

Serey Bright, PhD, is Assistant Professor at Valdosta State University. She received her PhD in Counselor Education and her Master of Education in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from Auburn University. Her clinical background includes assessment and counseling at East Alabama Medical Center, and college counseling at Columbus State University and Carnegie Mellon University. Current research interests include supervisory development and working alliance, use of self-disclosure in counseling and supervision, creative teaching interventions for multicultural courses, and the impact of expressive arts in counseling. sbright@valdosta.edu



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Published

2019-05-30

How to Cite

Grimes, L. E., Arrastía-Chisholm, M. A., & Bright, S. B. (2019). How Can They Know What They Don’t Know? The Beliefs and Experiences of Rural School Counselors about STEM Career Advising. Theory & Practice in Rural Education, 9(1), 74–90. https://doi.org/10.3776/tpre.2019.v9n1p74-90