Seymour Flops
Diamond Member
I work with a lot of school counselors, very often in my role working with students who have depression and other mental illness and behavior disorders. One thing I often hear the counselors tell the students is "I have to tell someone if you tell me that:
-Someone is hurting you
-You are hurting or planning to hurt someone
-You are hurting or planning to hurt yourself
They don't really promise complete confidence for any other topics that the student might talk to the counselor about, but it is kind of implied. My impression is that the counselors do intend to keep confidence, but that if something came up not on the list, but which the counselor felt must be passed on, they would.
There is some attention to this in the wake of the Florida law which states, in part:
As I read that, it does not require counselors to tell parents anything. It forbids school districts from forbidding counselors from telling parents about their children's mental, emotional, or physical health or well being.
If I'm a counselor, I would read that to mean that I am the decider, based on my professional ethics, of what to tell parents, and when to tell them. That's not a requirement that parents be told if their children seek counseling for gender dysphoria, or homosexuality. I think some of the law's supporters may actually be buying into the hype of its detractors and believe that this requirement now exists.
Here's my opinion:
If a kid tells a counselor that they have gender dysphoria or words that make a reasonable person suspect gender dysphoria, such as "I think I'm really a girl," or the like, then the counselor has the professional obligation to keep confidence or not, based on what the counselor judges best for the child, with a bias, if any, toward keeping the confidence.
Maybe the kid is going through a phase. Maybe the kid wants attention and will forget the whole thing the next day and say that they think they are really a reincarnation of Ghandi or the like. Maybe the counselor can help the kid understand that being uncomfortable with sexuality is normal, so give it some time. That kind of helpful guidance might be stopped if she immediately calls parent or administrators and makes a big deal out of it.
On the other hand, if that counselor thinks, "I believe this a bona fide case of transgenderism, and I want to help this kid start the process of transitioning," the parents should goldurn right be told and before the counselor takes a single step. Making a move like that without parental consent would very much turn it into a big deal. Barring a truly abusive family situation, parents should be the only one starting big deals for their kids.
But that's my opinion. What say you?
-Someone is hurting you
-You are hurting or planning to hurt someone
-You are hurting or planning to hurt yourself
They don't really promise complete confidence for any other topics that the student might talk to the counselor about, but it is kind of implied. My impression is that the counselors do intend to keep confidence, but that if something came up not on the list, but which the counselor felt must be passed on, they would.
There is some attention to this in the wake of the Florida law which states, in part:
As I read that, it does not require counselors to tell parents anything. It forbids school districts from forbidding counselors from telling parents about their children's mental, emotional, or physical health or well being.
If I'm a counselor, I would read that to mean that I am the decider, based on my professional ethics, of what to tell parents, and when to tell them. That's not a requirement that parents be told if their children seek counseling for gender dysphoria, or homosexuality. I think some of the law's supporters may actually be buying into the hype of its detractors and believe that this requirement now exists.
Here's my opinion:
If a kid tells a counselor that they have gender dysphoria or words that make a reasonable person suspect gender dysphoria, such as "I think I'm really a girl," or the like, then the counselor has the professional obligation to keep confidence or not, based on what the counselor judges best for the child, with a bias, if any, toward keeping the confidence.
Maybe the kid is going through a phase. Maybe the kid wants attention and will forget the whole thing the next day and say that they think they are really a reincarnation of Ghandi or the like. Maybe the counselor can help the kid understand that being uncomfortable with sexuality is normal, so give it some time. That kind of helpful guidance might be stopped if she immediately calls parent or administrators and makes a big deal out of it.
On the other hand, if that counselor thinks, "I believe this a bona fide case of transgenderism, and I want to help this kid start the process of transitioning," the parents should goldurn right be told and before the counselor takes a single step. Making a move like that without parental consent would very much turn it into a big deal. Barring a truly abusive family situation, parents should be the only one starting big deals for their kids.
But that's my opinion. What say you?
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