Antiracist Counseling in Schools and Communities. Группа авторов

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the murder of George Floyd coupled with the rise of white supremacist groups (e.g., the Proud Boys, the Aryan Brotherhood), counseling professionals are paying increased attention to issues of racism and are articulating a desire to be antiracist, in particular in school settings (American School Counselor Association [ASCA], 2021). Shifting to antiracist counseling requires more than focusing on multiculturalism, diversity, and inclusion. It involves more than collecting data, reading books by Black authors, and empathizing with Black and Brown clients. Being an antiracist counselor requires interrogating one’s racial consciousness and the impact of one’s behaviors in counseling relationships with Black and Brown students or clients. Counselors must name the importance of the links among race, racism, and counseling. Counseling, in particular school counseling, is a racialized process, given the racist practices and policies that are embedded in schools and communities. Thus, if counselors do not address embedded racist and biased practices and policies in schools, then they are likely to reproduce racial structures and hierarchies in their practice.

      Lori Gottlieb (2020) wrote a revealing, poignant opinion piece in The Washington Post titled “I Thought I Was an Antiracist Therapist. Then I Looked More Closely.” Gottlieb admitted that her graduate training in cultural competence did not prepare her to delve deeply into the racism of her patients as well as her own racist beliefs and ideas. She gave the following example:

      I’m seeing a black patient, a woman who looks a lot like me on paper—we’re both professionals, we went to the same college, we’re moms of kids about the same ages. And because of our similarities—and also my unstated reluctance to go there—we tacitly collude in pretending that she isn’t black and I’m not white. Until one day she tells me about an incident at her company, where she is one of the few black executives: Her white boss chose a white woman for a promotion that she had fully expected to earn, and my patient would have been the first black executive to be promoted to this level. The white woman was not nearly as experienced or qualified, my patient tells me. And she says this is the story of her life—a story she hadn’t told me about until that day.

      We may have a lot in common, but unlike her, I had never walked into a classroom at our college and wondered if I had to prove myself worthy of being there; I hadn’t sat in the dining hall and overheard someone talking about “affirmative-action” students who got into the school more easily; I never stepped foot in a job interview and watched someone try to cover her surprise because, based on my résumé, she had expected my skin to be lighter. (Gottlieb, 2020, paras. 6–7)

      An antiracist perspective in counseling is long overdue. Even professional associations are joining the call. ACA (2020) issued the following statement on antiracism:

      Racism, police brutality, systemic violence, and the dehumanizing forces of oppression, powerlessness, and White supremacy have eroded the very fabric of humanity which ideally binds our society together. Macrolevel systemic racism extends to disparities in institutional policies and procedures in physical and mental healthcare, education, the judicial system, employment, sports and entertainment, and the brutal violence of law enforcement. These larger societal oppressions lead to inaccessibility to resources and social marginalization, which descend finally to individual racist attitudes, implicit biases, stereotypes, microaggressions, and even death. The ongoing and historical injustices are not acknowledged by those who want to be in power or protect their entitlements. Some who do acknowledge, do so reactively, temporarily, or superficially and thus, no meaningful change occurs. Anti-Black racism is often reframed as accidental, an unfortunate incident, or as the criminality of the victim.

      The American Counseling Association is built on enduring values and a mission that promotes: human dignity and diversity, respect, the attainment of a quality of life for all, empowerment, integrity, social justice advocacy, equity, and inclusion. If we remain silent, and do not promote racial justice, these words become harmful and meaningless for our members and the counseling community. Given the rapidly evolving double pandemic of COVID-19 and the continued exposure of Black people to institutionalized racism, ACA wants to be clear about where we stand and the ongoing actions we will take. As proactive leaders, counselors, mentors, supervisors, scholars, and trainers we will break away from this structure of racism trauma, and the violence born on the necks of Black people.

      Our stance is: Black Lives Matter. We have a moral and professional obligation to deconstruct institutions which have historically been designed to benefit White America. These systems must be dismantled in order to level the playing field for Black communities. Allyship is not enough. We strive to create liberated spaces in the fight against white supremacy and the dehumanization of Black people. The burden of transgenerational trauma should not be shouldered by Black Americans even though they have remained resilient.

      ASCA (2020), similarly, issued a statement:

      The American School Counselor Association condemns violence and the systemic and institutional racism that marginalizes African Americans. ASCA calls on all Americans to end the cycle of racism and on leaders to enact and enforce laws protecting members of the Black community and give them the same opportunities to lead successful and productive lives that other Americans enjoy. The recent deaths of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd did not occur in schools or involve students; however, these and other violent acts can indirectly cause long-term harm to students. Witnessing brutality or experiencing the death of a family member or friend constitutes an adverse childhood experience, which can affect students well into adulthood. More broadly, systemic racism perpetuates discrimination, bigotry and prejudice that has relegated African Americans to generations of poverty, underemployment, substandard housing, poor health care and second-class citizenship.

      In 2007, I introduced a framework for social justice school counseling that included six key components: (a) counseling and intervention planning; (b) consultation; (c) connecting schools, families, and communities; (d) collecting and using data; (e) challenging bias; and (f) coordinating student services and support (Holcomb-McCoy, 2007). The framework was introduced as a means of integrating more systemic and structural analysis into the practice of school counseling. Lee (2005), Bemak and Chung (2005), and Green and Keys (2001) called for school counseling that acknowledges

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