078-11 Wyo. Code R. §§ 11-3 - Education Requirement for Licensure
(a) The applicant shall have
received a master's or doctorate degree in counseling from a Council for
Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP) or
Council on Rehabilitation Education (CORE) accredited program in
counseling.
(b) Applicants who have
completed graduate counselor programs not accredited by CACREP or CORE may be
deemed to have met the educational requirement provided they meet the following
criteria:
(i) The graduate degree program, and
any applicable additional graduate level course work, was completed at an
educational institution accredited by one of the regional or national
institutional accrediting bodies recognized by the Council for Higher Education
Accreditation (CHEA).
(ii) The
program was substantially similar in content as required by CACREP including
instructor qualifications, clinical supervision and course work.
(iii) The applicant must have completed a
minimum of seventy-two (72) quarter hours or forty-eight (48) semester hours of
graduate level course work. Applicants who graduated after July 1, 2013, must
have completed a minimum of ninety (90) quarter hours or sixty (60) semester
hours of graduate level course work.
(iv) The official transcripts, course
prefixes, and course descriptions clearly identify the educational program as
preparing persons to be professional counselors.
(v) Course work shall be completed in a
master's or doctoral program or subsequent graduate level course
work.
(vi) Course work was
completed in each of the core areas defined herein:
(A) Practicums, Internships or Field
Experience under clinical supervision.
(I)
Students must complete supervised practicum experiences that total a minimum of
100 clock hours over a minimum 10-week academic term.
(II) The program requires completion of a
supervised internship in the student's designated program area of 600 clock
hours, begun after successful completion of the practicum. The internship is
intended to reflect the comprehensive work experience of a professional
counselor appropriate to the designated program area. Each student's internship
includes all of the following:
(1.) At least
240 clock hours of direct service, including experience leading
groups;
(2.) Weekly interaction
that averages one hour per week of individual or triadic supervision throughout
the internship, usually performed by the onsite supervisor; and
(3.) An average of 1 1/2 hours per week of
group supervision provided on a regular schedule throughout the internship and
performed by a program faculty member.
(B) Human Growth and Development- studies
that provide an understanding of the nature and needs of individuals at all
developmental levels, including all of the following:
(I) Theories of individual and family
development and transitions across the life-span;
(II) Theories of learning and normal and
abnormal personality development;
(III) Effects of crises, disasters, and other
trauma-causing events on diverse individuals across the lifespan;
(IV) Individual, biological, neurological,
physiological, systemic, spiritual, and environmental factors that affect human
development, functioning, and behavior;
(V) A general framework for understanding
differing abilities and strategies for differentiated interventions;
(VI) Theories and etiology of addictions and
addictive behaviors; and
(VII)
Ethical and culturally relevant strategies for promoting resilience and optimum
development and wellness across the life span
(C) Social and Cultural Diversity- studies
that provide an understanding of the cultural context of relationships, issues
and trends in a multicultural society including all of the following:
(I) Research addressing multicultural and
pluralistic characteristics within and among diverse groups nationally and
internationally;
(II) Learning
activities to foster student's self understanding of the impact of their
heritage, attitudes, beliefs, understandings, and acculturative experiences on
their views of others;
(III)
Theories and models of multicultural counseling, identity development, and
social justice and advocacy;
(IV)
Strategies for identifying and eliminating barriers, prejudices, and processes
of intentional and unintentional oppression and discrimination;
(V) Learning activities that foster
understandings of the helpseeking behaviors of diverse clients;
(VI) Learning activities that foster
understanding of the impact of spiritual beliefs on clients' and counselors'
worldviews; and
(VII) Multicultural
competencies and strategies for working with and advocating optimum wellness
for diverse populations;
(D) Helping Relationships- studies that
provide an understanding of counseling process in a multicultural society,
including all of the following:
(I) Theories
and models of effective counseling and wellness programs;
(II) Counselor characteristics and behaviors
that influence the helping process;
(III) Essential interviewing, case
conceptualization and counseling skills;
(IV) A systems approach that provides an
understanding of family, social, community, and political networks;
(V) Theories, models, and strategies for
understanding and practicing consultation; and
(VI) Ethical and culturally relevant
strategies for developing helping relationships:
(VII) Developmentally relevant counseling
treatment or intervention plans;
(VIII) Development of measurable outcomes for
clients;
(IX) Empirically-based
counseling strategies and techniques for prevention, intervention, and
advocacy;
(X) Strategies to promote
client understanding of and access to a variety of community-based
resources;
(XI) Suicide prevention
models and strategies;
(XII) Crisis
intervention and psychological first aid strategies; and
(XIII) Processes for aiding students in
developing a personal model of counseling.
(E) Group Work- studies that provide
theoretical foundations of group work and dynamics associated with group
process including all of the following:
(I)
Therapeutic factors and how they contribute to group effectiveness;
(II) Characteristics and functions of
effective group leaders;
(III)
Approaches to group formation, including recruiting, screening, and selecting
members;
(IV) Types of groups and
other considerations that affect conducting groups in varied
settings;
(V) Ethical and
culturally relevant strategies for designing and facilitating groups;
and
(VI) Direct experiences in
which students participate as group members in a small group activity, approved
by the program, for a minimum of 10 clock hours over the course of one academic
term.
(F) Career
Development- studies that provide an understanding of career development and
related life factors, including all of the following:
(I) Theories and models of career
development, counseling, and decision-making;
(II) Process for identifying and utilizing
career, avocational, educational, occupational and labor market information
resources, technology and information systems;
(III) Approaches for assessing the conditions
of the work environment on clients' overall life experiences;
(IV) Strategies for assessing abilities,
interests, values, personality, and other factors that contribute to career
development;
(V) Strategies for
career development program planning, organization, implementation,
administration, and evaluation;
(VI) Strategies for advocating for diverse
clients' career and educational development and employment opportunities in a
global economy;
(VII) Strategies
for facilitating client skills development for career, educational, and
life-work planning and management;
(VIII) Approaches for conceptualizing the
interrelationships among and between work, family, and other life roles and
factors;
(IX) Methods of
identifying and utilizing assessment tools and techniques relevant to career
planning and decision making; and
(X) Ethical and culturally relevant
strategies for addressing career development.
(G) Assessment- studies that provide an
understanding of individual and group approaches to assessment and evaluation
in a multicultural society, including all of the following:
(I) Historical perspectives concerning the
nature and meaning of assessment;
(II) Basic concepts of standardized and
non-standardized testing, norm-referenced and criterion-referenced assessment
and group and individual assessments;
(III) Statistical concepts, including scales
of measurement, measures of central tendency, indices of variability, shapes
and types of distributions, and correlations;
(IV) Reliability and validity in the use of
assessments;
(V) Methods of
effectively preparing for and conducting initial assessment meetings;
(VI) Procedures for assessing risk of
aggression or danger to others, self-inflicted harm or suicide;
(VII) Procedures for identifying and
reporting abuse:
(VIII) Use of
assessments for diagnostic and intervention planning purposes;
(IX) Use of assessments relevant to
academic/educational, career, personal, and social development;
(X) Use of environmental assessments and
systematic behavioral observations;
(XI) Use of symptom checklists, personality
and psychological testing;
(XII)
Use of assessment results to diagnose developmental, behavioral, and mental
disorders; and
(XIII) Ethical and
culturally and developmentally relevant strategies for selecting,
administering, and interpreting assessment and test results.
(H) Research and Program
Evaluation- studies that provide an understanding of research methods,
statistical analysis, needs assessment, and program evaluation, including all
of the following:
(I) The importance of
research in advancing the counseling profession, including its use to inform
evidence based practice;
(II)
Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed research methods;
(III) Statistical methods used in conducting
research and program evaluation;
(IV) Evaluation of counseling interventions
and programs;
(V) Development of
outcome measures for counseling programs;
(VI) Analysis and use of data in counseling;
and
(VII) Ethical and culturally
relevant strategies for conducting, interpreting and reporting the results of
research and/or program evaluation studies.
(I) Professional Counseling Orientation and
Ethical Practice- studies that provide an understanding of all of the following
aspects of professional functioning:
(I)
History and philosophy of the counseling profession and the origins of the
counseling specialty areas;
(II)
The multiple professional roles and functions of counselors across specialty
areas and their relationships with other human service providers, including
interagency and interorganizational collaboration and consultation;
(III) Counselors' roles and responsibilities
as members of interdisciplinary community outreach and emergency management
response teams;
(IV) Self-care
strategies appropriate to the counselor role;
(V) Technology's impact on the counseling
profession;
(VI) Strategies for
personal and professional self-evaluation and implications for
practice;
(VII) Counseling
supervision models, practices, and processes;
(VIII) Professional organizations, including
membership benefits, activities, services to members, and current
issues;
(IX) Professional
credentialing, including certification, licensure, and accreditation practices
and standards, and the effects of public policy on these issues;
(X) The role and process of the professional
counselor advocating on behalf of the profession;
(XI) Advocacy processes needed to address
institutional and social barriers that impede access, equity, and success for
clients; and
(XII) Ethical
standards of professional organizations and credentialing bodies, and
applications of ethical and legal considerations in professional
counseling.
Notes
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