Online Master of Arts in Counseling Program Guide
The Department of Counseling at Wake Forest University is widely regarded for delivering high-quality education. Our master’s degree programs can help you make an impact in areas like public and private schools, professional counseling settings, nonprofit agencies, government settings and others.
Our courses provide knowledge in eight areas: Human growth and development, social and cultural foundations, helping relationships, group work, career and lifespan development, appraisal, research and program evaluation, and professional orientation.
Choose Wake Forest University and discover how counseling plays an important role in society.
At a Glance
Curriculum
Foundation Courses – All Tracks
This course is an introduction to the profession of counseling. It covers the history of counseling, as well as the roles counselors play in today’s society. It examines counseling associations and specialization areas within counseling. Professional issues such as licensure and certification of counselors are explored, too. Public policy, advocacy and other contemporary factors that impact the present and future of counseling are looked at in context and developmentally.
While the focus of the course is on introducing the counseling profession, we know that some of you are planning on the field of human services. The ties to that field will be less explicit, but you will be able to see the progression of helping services that will readily apply to human services.
Clinical Mental Health Specialty
60 credit hours (21 courses)
Beginning Practice
The Counseling Practicum is a pre-internship experience designed to help students further develop their individual counseling and group work skills under careful supervision. The Practicum includes a minimum of 185 total hours, with at least 150 hours of field experience in a community/mental health or school setting plus at least 35 hours of individual/triadic and group supervision by University faculty. The 185 hours break down as follows:
150 hours of work in a school or community setting over a period of one semester (an average of 12-15 hours per week for 14 weeks). These hours should include the following activities:
- A minimum of 50 hours of direct client contact.
- A minimum of 7 hours of supervision by the site supervisor, conducted weekly, across the semester. (Approximately 30 minutes per week).
35 hours of university supervision, which includes:
- 14 hours of individual or paired supervision by a university supervisor
- 21 hours of group supervision (1 1/2 hours per week) by a university supervisor
The internship provides students the opportunity to synthesize and utilize the theoretical, empirical, clinical and professional knowledge that you have gained thus far in the program. At your site, you will engage in the practice of clinical mental health counseling. Internship group supervision meetings will be based upon the needs, abilities and concerns of the group members and supervisor. Group and individual supervision are designed to facilitate growth in specific counseling skills, case conceptualization skills, application of counselor job responsibilities, self-awareness and professional identity development. The internship experience is intended to reflect the comprehensive work experience of a professional clinical mental health counselor.
You will complete clinical mental health counseling internship courses that together total a minimum of 600 hours of experience at a clinical mental health counseling site. During these courses, you will participate in weekly supervision at your site, as well as with your university colleagues and supervisor.
The internship provides students the opportunity to synthesize and utilize the theoretical, empirical, clinical and professional knowledge that you have gained thus far in the program. At your site, you will engage in the practice of clinical mental health counseling. Internship group supervision meetings will be based upon the needs, abilities and concerns of the group members and supervisor. Group and individual supervision are designed to facilitate growth in specific counseling skills, case conceptualization skills, application of counselor job responsibilities, self-awareness and professional identity development. The internship experience is intended to reflect the comprehensive work experience of a professional clinical mental health counselor.
You will complete clinical mental health counseling internship courses that together total a minimum of 600 hours of experience at a clinical mental health counseling site. During these courses, you will participate in weekly supervision at your site, as well as with your university colleagues and supervisor.
This course is an entry level introduction to substance abuse counseling, based on theory, research and application. Thus, it is structured to provide the student with a broad array of information drawn from theoretical formulations, research findings and practical/clinical application. The goal for this class is to facilitate your learning by introducing you to such concepts as pharmacological issues and terminology, models of addiction, theories on etiology, diagnosis and assessment, and numerous evidence-based treatment strategies.
The emphasis of the course will also be on clinical application, exploring interventions such as motivational interviewing, relapse prevention, developmental models of addiction, experiential activities, family-based interventions and 12-step self-help groups. Clinical application will be taught via small lecture, case studies, video and role play. Usually, for any given topic, conceptual and theoretical information will be presented first, followed by application via case studies, video and triadic practice. I encourage students to be actively engaged in the learning process, and participation in mutual help groups, triads, abstinence contracts, video analysis, etc. is expected.
This course highlights pertinent topics in the law and ethics related to the practice of counseling. You will be introduced to an overview and relevant guidelines in these areas. Hopefully your study will inspire you to take an active role in developing and monitoring your competence as a counselor, and demystify some of the legal and ethical issues that can feel most intimidating to counselors. The overarching goal is to help you to be a knowledgeable, careful counselor who always protects the clients or students with whom you work. In this course you will continue to build upon and grapple with some of the issues that you have learned about regarding competent, ethical and legal practice in your previous coursework.
You will have the opportunity to examine client rights and responsibilities as well as your role and duties in that area. We will explore a variety of topics including but not limited to: professional boundaries, record-keeping and documentation, confidentiality and its limits, responding to subpoenas, malpractice and negligence, informed consent and counselor competence.
School Counseling Specialty
60 credit hours (21 courses)
Beginning Practice
The Counseling Practicum is a pre-internship experience designed to help students further develop their individual counseling and group work skills under careful supervision. The Practicum includes a minimum of 185 total hours, with at least 150 hours of field experience in a community/mental health or school setting plus at least 35 hours of individual/triadic and group supervision by University faculty. The 185 hours break down as follows:
150 hours of work in a school or community setting over a period of one semester (an average of 12-15 hours per week for 14 weeks). These hours should include the following activities:
- A minimum of 50 hours of direct client contact.
- A minimum of 7 hours of supervision by the site supervisor, conducted weekly, across the semester. (Approximately 30 minutes per week).
35 hours of university supervision, which includes:
- 14 hours of individual or paired supervision by a university supervisor
- 21 hours of group supervision (1 1/2 hours per week) by a university supervisor
Internship is a highly individualized learning experience that provides opportunities for growth in skills, knowledge and professional development. In internship, you will have opportunities to practice school counseling. Internship supervision meetings will be related to the needs, abilities and concerns of the group members and supervisor. Activities will be designed to facilitate growth in specific counseling skills, case conceptualization skills, application of school counseling job responsibilities, self-awareness and professional identity development.
You will take two counseling internship courses (CNS 744 and 745) that together total a minimum of 600 hours of experience in a school site and 42 hours of group supervision with your colleagues and a university supervisor. Internships are completed following the successful completion of the Counseling Practicum. Each semester’s experience includes the following:
- 300 hours of work in a school setting over a period of one semester (an average of 21 hours per week for 14 weeks) and should include:
- 120 hours of direct service with clients and
- 14 hours of individual supervision by the site supervisor and
- 21 hours of group supervision (1 ½ hours/week) by program faculty with other students
- 321 hours minimum
Work in schools as an intern counselor and satisfactorily complete the following requirements:
- Complete 300 hours internship per semester (600/year) with 120 direct service clock hours each semester (24/year)
- Participate in all activities as requested by your site supervisor in a timely, complete manner
- Become familiar with and follow all state/county/school policies
- Maintain current professional liability insurance. Have documentation on file with the Wake counseling department.
- Adhere to ethical standards as outlined by the American Counseling Association and the American School Counseling Association. Read with your on-site supervisor and sign the ethical standards guidelines; submit the copy with all signatures to your program faculty.
- Obtain supervision from site supervisor and/or university supervisor immediately if you become aware of any information that would cause you to be concerned for anyone’s safety. Inform both supervisors without delay.
Internship is a highly individualized learning experience that provides opportunities for growth in skills, knowledge and professional development. In internship, you will have opportunities to practice school counseling. Internship supervision meetings will be related to the needs, abilities and concerns of the group members and supervisor. Activities will be designed to facilitate growth in specific counseling skills, case conceptualization skills, application of school counseling job responsibilities, self-awareness and professional identity development.
You will take two counseling internship courses (CNS 744 and 745) that together total a minimum of 600 hours of experience in a school site and 42 hours of group supervision with your colleagues and a university supervisor. Internships are completed following the successful completion of the Counseling Practicum. Each semester’s experience includes the following:
- 300 hours of work in a school setting over a period of one semester (an average of 21 hours per week for 14 weeks) and should include:
- 120 hours of direct service with clients and
- 14 hours of individual supervision by the site supervisor and
- 21 hours of group supervision (1 ½ hours/week) by program faculty with other students
- 321 hours minimum
Work in schools as an intern counselor and satisfactorily complete the following requirements:
- Complete 300 hours internship per semester (600/year) with 120 direct service clock hours each semester (24/year)
- Participate in all activities as requested by your site supervisor in a timely, complete manner
- Become familiar with and follow all state/county/school policies
- Maintain current professional liability insurance. Have documentation on file with the Wake counseling department.
- Adhere to ethical standards as outlined by the American Counseling Association and the American School Counseling Association. Read with your on-site supervisor and sign the ethical standards guidelines; submit the copy with all signatures to your program faculty.
- Obtain supervision from site supervisor and/or university supervisor immediately if you become aware of any information that would cause you to be concerned for anyone’s safety. Inform both supervisors without delay.
This course is designed to allow students to investigate current issues related to the practice of school counseling. The emphasis will be on identifying appropriate prevention responses to these issues.
Upon completion of this course, student will have the knowledge and skills outlined in the CACREP School Counseling standards. The lettering and numbers in the tentative schedule refer to specific guidelines from CACREP.
This course is an entry level introduction to substance abuse counseling, based on theory, research and application. Thus, it is structured to provide the student with a broad array of information drawn from theoretical formulations, research findings and practical/clinical application. The goal for this class is to facilitate your learning by introducing you to such concepts as pharmacological issues and terminology, models of addiction, theories on etiology, diagnosis and assessment, and numerous evidence-based treatment strategies.
The emphasis of the course will also be on clinical application, exploring interventions such as motivational interviewing, relapse prevention, developmental models of addiction, experiential activities, family-based interventions and 12-step self-help groups. Clinical application will be taught via small lecture, case studies, video and role play. Usually, for any given topic, conceptual and theoretical information will be presented first, followed by application via case studies, video and triadic practice. I encourage students to be actively engaged in the learning process, and participation in mutual help groups, triads, abstinence contracts, video analysis, etc. is expected.
This course highlights pertinent topics in the law and ethics related to the practice of counseling. You will be introduced to an overview and relevant guidelines in these areas. Hopefully your study will inspire you to take an active role in developing and monitoring your competence as a counselor, and demystify some of the legal and ethical issues that can feel most intimidating to counselors. The overarching goal is to help you to be a knowledgeable, careful counselor who always protects the clients or students with whom you work. In this course you will continue to build upon and grapple with some of the issues that you have learned about regarding competent, ethical and legal practice in your previous coursework.
You will have the opportunity to examine client rights and responsibilities as well as your role and duties in that area. We will explore a variety of topics including but not limited to: professional boundaries, record-keeping and documentation, confidentiality and its limits, responding to subpoenas, malpractice and negligence, informed consent and counselor competence.
Admission Requirements
- Bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution
- 3.0 cumulative undergraduate GPA
- Three letters of recommendation
- Personal statement
- $80 application fee
- Professional resume
- Phone interview and web-based virtual interview with enrollment advisor
- Background check
