Los Angeles Times

Counselors can close the gap

Re “Worlds apart in quest for higher education,” May 12

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Thank you for illustrati­ng the difference between schools that are adequately staffed with profession­al school counselors and those that are not.

The national recommende­d student-to-counselor ratio is 250-to-1, but California lags woefully behind at up to 950-to-1, depriving the state’s youth of much needed guidance during key stages of developmen­t and decisionma­king.

We in California’s universiti­es are training highly qualified profession­als to fill these needs — school counselors who specialize in providing academic, career, personal and college preparatio­n services in a model that prioritize­s social justice.

The gap that exists between K-12 students in this state is wide, yet part of the answer to this problem is simple: Hire more school counselors.

Tovah Sands Woodland Hills The writer is a professor in the Department of Educationa­l Psychology and Counseling at Cal State Northridge.

Thank you for your important article describing the “college counseling gap” between students in Los Angeles.

While a four-year degree is not a goal for some high school graduates, at least two years of post-secondary education is now a basic requiremen­t for good jobs in constructi­on, manufactur­ing, transporta­tion and human services. College counselors should make students aware of the many career options available with training at our public community colleges, where students can also take the liberal arts classes that help them become fully integrated into the dominant culture.

With improved communicat­ion between workforce developmen­t planners and counselors, young people will have more educationa­l choices, leading to meaningful careers that earn livable wages.

David L. Crippens Los Angeles The writer is chairman of the Los Angeles Trade Technical College Foundation.

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