THE ELEMENTARY & SECONDARY SCHOOL COUNSELING IMPROVEMENT ACT
STATUS: The Elementary School Counseling Demonstration Act, a discretionary grant program, was first authorized in 1994 under Title X of the Improving America's Schools Act (Public Law 103-382). Congress appropriated $20 million for the program in FY 2000 and increased the appropriation to $30 million in FY 2001. In FY 2000, grants were awarded to 58 school districts in 30 states. Thirty-one (31) additional grants in four new states were awarded for the 2001 fiscal year.
The House approved an amendment to the No Child Left Behind Act (H.R. 1), sponsored by Rep. Marge Roukema (R-NJ), to reauthorize the program and expand it to secondary schools. A similar amendment to the Better Education for Students and Teachers Act (S.1), sponsored by Senator Thad Cochran (R-MS), was approved by the Senate. The House- and Senate-approved bills are now before a House-Senate Conference Committee.
The National Association of Social Workers urges support for the reauthorization of the program, its expansion to secondary schools, and funding of $100 million in FY 2002 to ensure continued funding for the current grantees and new awards to secondary schools.
NEED: America's school students do not have adequate access to counseling and mental health services. The National Action Agenda for Children's Mental Health, issued by the Office of the Surgeon General in January 2001, reports that 1 in 10 children suffers from a mental illness severe enough to impair development. The National Institute of Mental Health reports that although 7.5 million children under the age of 18 require mental health services, only one in five children receive needed services. The implications for education and school success are enormous. The serious shortage of counseling and mental health services, provided by qualified school social workers, school counselors, and school psychologists, is undermining efforts to improve academic achievement and make schools safe.
The current Elementary School Counseling Demonstration Program is the only federal program designed to increase elementary school students' access to qualified school-based mental health professionals. No federal program currently exists to increase access for secondary school students. The current student-to-counselor ratio for K-12 is 500:1, twice the maximum ratio of 250:1 recommended by the American School Health Association. Ratios for school social workers and school psychologists are even higher.
RESULTS: The Elementary School Counseling Demonstration program has proven to prevent school violence and support academic achievement. Under the model for the current program, Smoother Sailing in Des Moines, Iowa, comprehensive counseling services:
- Decreased referrals to the principals office by nearly half.
- Decreased use of weapons, force, and threatening of others.
- Decreased school suspensions.
- Increased feelings of student safety.
One of the FY 2000 grantees, which instituted the program in three schools in Bowling Green, Kentucky, reports that:
- Suspensions and visits to the principal's office are becoming rare occurrences.
- More pupils are attending school and performing better in class.
- The number of suspended pupils has declined from an average of 21 pupils a month to 11.
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL COUNSELING DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM
First Year - FY 2000: $20 million
Grants Ranging from $145,000-$400,000 Awarded to 58 School Districts in 30 States
Second Year - FY 2001: $30 million
First Year Programs Awarded Continuing Second Year Grants
New Grants Ranging from $91,480-$396,540 Awarded to 31 School Districts in 19 States
TWO YEAR TOTAL: 89 School Districts in 34 States
ALABAMA FY 2000 - $370,309
Tuscaloosa
COLORADO FY 2000 - $541,716
Denver County
Moffat County (Craig)
IDAHO FY 2000 - $392,160
Nampa
ALASKA FY 2000 - $920,585
Copper River (Glennallen)
Anchorage
Fairbanks
CONNECTICUT FY 2001 - $388,599
Hartford
ILLINOIS FY 2001 - $376,553
Community Consolidated #65 (Evanston)
ARIZONA FY 2000 - $1,031,276
Tuba City
Tucson
Dysart (El Mirage)
FY 2001 - $787,046
Mary C. O'Brien Accommodation (Florence)
Peoria Unified No. 11 (Glendale)
FLORIDA FY 2000 - $1,103,781
Duval County (Jacksonville)
Broward County (Ft. Lauderdale)
Sarsota County
KANSAS FY 2000 - $389,801
Wichita
FY 2001 - $357,554
Kansas City
CALIFORNIA FY 2000 - $2,551,329
Yuba City
Mt. Pleasant (San Jose)
Alum Rock (San Jose)
Lamont
Imperial County (El Centro)
Jurupa (Riverside)
Newport-Mesa
FY 2001 - $3,600,407
Healdsburg
Moreno Valley
Lennox
Centralia (Buena Park)
Sanger
Santa Paula
Fontana
Marysville
Stockton
Napa
GEORGIA FY 2000 - $310,430
DeKalb County
KENTUCKY FY 2000 - $1,251,127
Bowling Green
Harlan County
Montgomery County (Mt. Sterling)
Owensboro
FY 2001 - $91,480
Russell
LOUISIANA FY 2000 - $399,261
Terrebonne Parish (Houma)
NEW JERSEY FY 2001 - $389,600
Piscataway
TENNESSEE FY 2000 - $297,504
Nashville
FY 2001 - $167,788
Elizabethton
MARYLAND FY 2000 - $380,244
Baltimore CityNEW MEXICO FY 2000 - $253,983
Santa Fe
FY 2001 - $387,111
Farmington
TEXAS FY 2000 - $612,175
McAllen
Grand Prairie
FY 2001 - $690,340
Austin
Brooks County (Falfurrias)
MASSACHUSETTS FY 2000 - $689,219
Brookline
Lawrence
FY 2001 - $396,538
Cambridge
NEW YORK FY 2000 - $2,112,452
Community #3 (Brooklyn)
Schenectady
New York City (Brooklyn)
Community #2 (NYC)
Long Beach (Lido Beach)
Community #13 (Brooklyn)
FY 2001 - $390,245
Freeport
UTAH FY 2000 - $399,282
Davis (Farmington)
MICHIGAN FY 2000- $243,725
Mid-Michigan Academy (Lansing)
FY 2001 - $392,427
Saginaw
OHIO FY 2000 - $763,069
Elyria
Toledo
WASHINGTON FY 2000 - $350,431
Sunnyside
FY 2001 - $396,292
Highline (Seattle)
MINNESOTA FY 2000 - $1,175,080
St. Cloud
Rochester
Rosemount
FY 2001 - $376,038
Minneapolis
OKLAHOMA FY 2000 - $538,949
Madill
McAlester
FY 2001 - $460,096
Osage County Interlocal Cooperative (Hominy)
Harrah Independent # 7
WEST VIRGINIA FY 2000 - $242,478
Upshur County (Buckhannon)
NEBRASKA FY 2000 - $350,931
Southern (Wymore)
PENNSYLVANIA FY 2000 - $378,662
Philadelphia
WISCONSIN FY 2000 - $381,261
Milwaukee
FY 2001 - $191,210
Adams-Friendship Area (Friendship)
NEVADA FY 2000 - $400,000
Clark County (Las Vegas)
SOUTH CAROLINA FY 2000 - $614,837
Allendale County
Lexington & Richland Counties (Ballentine)
FY 2001 - $372,656
Sumter
WYOMING FY 2001 - $253,359
Natrona County (Casper)
NEW HAMPSHIRE FY 2000 - $366,943
Nashua
Elementary School Counseling Grants
July 2001