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Article
“They Stay With You”: Counselor Educators’ Emotionally Intense Gatekeeping Experiences
The Professional Counselor (2020)
  • Daniel A. DeCino, University of South Dakota
  • Phillip Waalkes, University of Missouri-St. Louis
  • Amanda Dalbey, University of South Dakota
Abstract
Emotionally intense gatekeeping experiences can require counselor educators to engage in a complicated, time- and energy-consuming, and draining series of events that can last years and involve legal proceedings. Research related to counselor educators’ experiences of intense emotions while gatekeeping remains limited. The aim of this transcendental phenomenological study was to investigate counselor educators’ (N = 11) emotionally intense gatekeeping experiences. Five themes emerged from the data: early warning signs, elevated student misconduct, dismissal, legal interactions, and change from experience. By being transparent about their feelings and challenges regarding emotionally intense gatekeeping experiences, counselor educators may compel other faculty, counselors in the field, and doctoral students to be better prepared for emotional gatekeeping experiences.

Disciplines
Publication Date
2020
DOI
10.15241/dad.10.4.548
Citation Information
Daniel A. DeCino, Phillip Waalkes and Amanda Dalbey. "“They Stay With You”: Counselor Educators’ Emotionally Intense Gatekeeping Experiences" The Professional Counselor Vol. 10 Iss. 4 (2020)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/phillip-waalkes/16/