Rarely we receive feedback from students on how helpful our actions and initiatives are!This session presents findings from a survey of rural middle school students’ perceptions of school counselor helpfulness and its impact on academic and career decision-making. Attendees will gain insights into measuring counselor support, key factors influencing student evaluations, and potential implications for supporting students’ academic and career interests.
This session examines researcher identity development through a Relational-Cultural Theory lens, emphasizing vulnerability, connection, and authenticity in scholarly growth. Participants will explore relational influences on research identity, critically reflect on barriers to authenticity, and identify strategies to cultivate a connected, meaningful scholarly voice. Attendees will gain tools to support sustainable and relationally grounded research trajectories.
The dissertation phase is isolating, and for Black women navigating PWIs while managing multiple roles, that isolation carries the risk of staying ABD. This session explores how three Black women doctoral candidates reframed completion through immersive writing retreats rooted in connection, culture, and sisterhood. Grounded in research on identity-affirming spaces and peer support, presenters share what made the difference. Attendees leave with a framework for underrepresented doctoral writers.
Graduate counseling programs struggle to provide consistent, ethical training in crisis and trauma care. This mixed-methods study evaluates AI-based simulations versus role-play in a CACREP course. Findings examine impacts on self-efficacy, decision-making, and preparedness, positioning AI simulation as a scalable, trauma-informed training tool.
New faculty face a variety of challenges in transitioning from dissertation completion to building a sustainable research agenda, with literature highlighting identity shifts, collaboration demands, and tenure pressures (Gibson et al., 2015; Gosling et al., 2020). The presenters address this transition by offering practical strategies for reframing dissertation work into a coherent research program, cultivating mentorship and collaboration, and aligning with long-term goals.
This roundtable session draws on findings from an Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) study to explore how international counselor trainees conceptualize wellness. Participants will analyze how cultural contexts and exposure to wellness frameworks within counselor education shape trainees’ ongoing meaning‑making of wellness. Guided discussion will focus on implications for counseling research, education, and supervision to support culturally responsive wellness approaches.