Kan. Admin. Regs. § 102-3-3a - Education requirements
To qualify for licensure as a professional counselor or a clinical professional counselor, the applicant's education shall meet the applicable requirements specified in this regulation.
(a) Each of the following terms, as used in this
regulation, shall have the meaning specified in this subsection:
(1) "Core faculty member" means an individual who
is part of the program's teaching staff and who meets the following conditions:
(A) Is an individual whose education, training,
and experience are consistent with the individual's role within the program and are
consistent with the published description of the goals, philosophy, and educational
purpose of the program;
(B) is an
individual whose primary professional employment is at the institution in which the
program is housed; and
(C) is an
individual who is identified with the program and is centrally involved in program
development, decision making, and student training as demonstrated by consistent
inclusion of the individual's name in public and departmental documents.
(2) "In residence," when used to
describe a student, means that the student is completing coursework during which the
student and one or more core faculty members are in face-to-face contact either in
person or by synchronous, real-time videoconferencing.
(3) "Primary professional employment" means at
least 20 hours per week of instruction, research, any other service to the
institution in the course of employment, and the related administrative
work.
(b) At the time of
application, each applicant shall have met the following requirements:
(1) Received either a master's or a doctoral
degree in counseling, or a related field, from a program that meets one of the
following requirements:
(A) Is not below the
accreditation standards of the council for the accreditation of counseling and
related educational programs; or
(B)
meets the requirements in subsections (f) and (g); and
(2) as a part of or in addition to the coursework
completed for the graduate degree in counseling or a related field, completed at
least 60 graduate semester hours, or the academic equivalent, of which at least 45
graduate semester hours, or the academic equivalent, shall clearly meet the
coursework requirements in subsection (c).
(c) Each applicant shall have satisfactorily
completed formal academic coursework that contributes to the development of a broad
conceptual framework for counseling theory and practice as a basis for more advanced
academic studies. This formal academic coursework shall consist of at least 45
graduate semester hours, or the academic equivalent, that are distributed across the
substantive content areas provided in this subsection. None of these credit hours
shall be earned through independent study courses. There shall be at least two
discrete and unduplicated semester hours, or the academic equivalent, in each of the
following substantive content areas:
(1) Counseling
theory and practice, which shall include studies in the basic theories, principles,
and techniques of counseling and their applications to professional
settings;
(2) the helping relationship,
which shall include studies in the philosophical bases of helping relationships and
the application of the helping relationship to counseling practice, as well as an
emphasis on the development of practitioner and client self-awareness;
(3) group dynamics, processes, and counseling
approaches and techniques, which shall include studies in theories and types of
groups, as well as descriptions of group practices, methods, dynamics, and
facilitative skills;
(4) human growth
and development, which shall include studies that provide a broad understanding of
the nature and needs of individuals at all developmental levels and in multicultural
contexts;
(5) career development and
lifestyle foundations, which shall include studies in vocational theory, the
relationship between career choice and lifestyle, sources of occupational and
educational information, approaches to career decision-making processes, and career
development exploration techniques;
(6)
appraisal of individuals and studies and training in the development of a framework
for understanding the individual, including methods of data gathering and
interpretation, individual and group testing, and the study of individual
differences;
(7) social and cultural
foundations, which shall include studies in change processes, ethnicity,
subcultures, families, gender issues, the changing roles of women, sexism, racism,
urban and rural societies, population patterns, cultural mores, use of leisure time,
and differing life patterns. These studies may come from the behavioral sciences,
economics, political science, and similar disciplines;
(8) research and evaluation, which shall include
studies in the areas of statistics, research design, development of research,
development of program goals and objectives, and evaluation of program goals and
objectives;
(9) professional
orientation, which shall include studies in the goals and objectives of professional
organizations, codes of ethics, legal considerations, standards of preparation and
practice, certification, licensing, and the role identities of counselors and others
in the helping professions; and
(10)
supervised practical experience, which shall include studies in the application and
practice of the theories and concepts presented in formal study. This experiential
practice shall be performed under the close supervision of the instructor and
on-site supervisor with the use of direct observation and the preparation and review
of written case notes. Direct observation may include the use of one-way mirrors in
a counseling laboratory, the use of videotaped or audiotaped sessions, or the use of
synchronous videoconferencing or similar synchronous communication
devices.
(d) Each applicant
for licensure as a clinical professional counselor whose master's or doctoral degree
is earned before July 1, 2003 shall have earned the graduate degree in accordance
with subsections (b) and (c).
(e) Each
applicant for licensure as a clinical professional counselor whose master's or
doctoral degree is earned on or after July 1, 2003 shall meet the following
education requirements:
(1) Have earned a graduate
degree in accordance with subsections (b) and (c);
(2) in addition to or as a part of the academic
requirements for the graduate degree, have completed 15 graduate semester credit
hours, or the academic equivalent, supporting diagnosis and treatment of mental
disorders using the "diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders" adopted
in K.A.R. 102-3-15. The 15 graduate semester credit hours, or the academic
equivalent, shall include both of the following:
(A) The applicant shall have satisfactorily
completed two graduate semester hours, or the academic equivalent, of discrete
coursework in ethics and two graduate semester hours, or the academic equivalent, of
discrete coursework in psychopathology and diagnostic assessment, including the
study of the latest edition of the "diagnostic and statistical manual of mental
disorders" and assessment instruments that support diagnosis.
(B) The applicant shall have satisfactorily
completed coursework addressing treatment approaches and interdisciplinary referral
and collaboration; and
(3)
Have met one of the following experience requirements:
(A) Satisfactory completion of a graduate-level,
supervised clinical practicum of professional experience that includes psychotherapy
and assessment. The practicum shall integrate diagnosis and treatment of mental
disorders with use of the "diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders"
adopted in K.A.R. 102-3-15 and shall include at least 280 hours of direct client
contact; or
(B) completion of additional
direct client contact hours providing psychotherapy and assessment as part of the
postgraduate supervised experience. The experience shall consist of the number of
hours that the applicant was lacking to attain 280 hours of direct client contact
during the practicum. The postgraduate hours and the practicum hours completed shall
total at least 280 hours. This experience shall be in addition to the 3,000 hours of
postgraduate, supervised experience required for each licensed clinical professional
counselor as required in K.A.R. 102-3-7a.
(f) In order to be approved by the board, each
educational program in professional counseling, or a related field, shall meet the
following requirements:
(1) Have established
program admission requirements that are based, in part or in full, on objective
measures or standardized achievement tests and measures;
(2) require an established curriculum that
encompasses at least two academic years of graduate study;
(3) have clear administrative authority and
primary responsibility within the program for the core and specialty areas of
training in professional counseling;
(4)
have an established, organized, and comprehensive sequence of study that is planned
by administrators who are responsible for providing an integrated educational
experience in professional counseling;
(5) engage in continuous systematic program
evaluation indicating how the mission objectives and student learning outcomes are
measured and met;
(6) be chaired or
directed by an identifiable person who holds a doctoral degree in counseling or a
related field that was earned from a regionally accredited college or university
upon that person's actual completion of a formal academic training
program;
(7) have an identifiable,
full-time, professional faculty whose members hold earned graduate degrees in
professional counseling or a related field;
(8) have an established, identifiable body of
students who are formally enrolled in the program with the goal of obtaining a
degree;
(9) require an appropriate
practicum, internship, or field or laboratory training in professional counseling
that integrates didactic learning with supervised clinical experience;
(10) conduct an ongoing, objective review and
evaluation of each student's learning and progress and report this evaluation in the
official student transcripts;
(11)
require that at least 30 graduate semester credit hours, or the academic equivalent,
of coursework be completed in residence at one institution and require that the
practicum or internship be completed at the same institution; and
(12) require that the number of graduate semester
hours, or the academic equivalent, delivered by adjunct faculty does not exceed the
number of graduate semester hours, or the academic equivalent, delivered by core
faculty members.
(g) In order
for an applicant to qualify for licensure, the college or university at which the
applicant completed the degree requirements for counseling or a related field shall
meet these requirements:
(1) Be regionally
accredited, with accreditation standards equivalent to those met by Kansas colleges
and universities;
(2) document in
official publications, including course catalogs and announcements, the program
description and standards and the admission requirements of the professional
counseling education and training program;
(3) identify and clearly describe in pertinent
institutional catalogs the coursework, experiential, and other academic program
requirements that must be satisfied before conferral of the graduate degree in
counseling;
(4) clearly identify and
specify in pertinent institutional catalogs its intent to educate and train
professional counselors;
(5) have
clearly established the professional counselor education program as a coherent
entity within the college or university that, when the applicant's graduate degree
was conferred, met the program standards in subsection (f); and
(6) have conferred the graduate degree in
counseling upon the applicant's successful completion of an established and required
formal program of studies.
(h)
The following types of study shall not be substituted for or counted toward the
coursework requirements of subsections (b), (c), (d), and (e):
(1) Academic coursework that the applicant
completed as a part of or in conjunction with the undergraduate degree
requirements;
(2) academic coursework
that has been audited rather than graded;
(3) academic coursework for which the applicant
received an incomplete or failing grade;
(4) coursework that the board determines is not
closely related to the field or practice of counseling;
(5) graduate or postgraduate coursework or
training provided by any college, university, institute, or training program that
does not meet the requirements of subsections (f) and (g); and
(6) any continuing education, in-service activity,
or on-the-job training.
(i)
The following types of study may be counted toward the 60 graduate semester hours
required under paragraph (b)(2):
(1) No more than
six graduate semester hours of independent study that is related to the field or
practice of counseling, except that independent study shall not be used to meet any
of the substantive content area requirements specified in subsection (c);
and
(2) no more than four graduate
semester hours for thesis research and writing.
Notes
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