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Welcome
Career Opportunities with a BSRS
Job Skills and Titles
Congratulations on your interest in the field of rehabilitation services.
The LSUHSC Department of Rehabilitation Counseling has been dedicated to
undergraduate education for over 20 years. Students are recognized as being
well-prepared for employment and/or graduate studies. The LSUHSC BSRS degree
program is committed to educating undergraduate rehabilitation students with
the foundation, skills and knowledge to effectively work with persons with
disability. It is estimated that over 50 million people with disabilities
need support from trained professionals.
Career
Opportunities
The purpose of the baccalaureate in Rehabilitation Services is to provide the
student with a broad, liberal arts education combined with a basic
understanding of physical, mental, emotional, and social disabilities. The
student is initially provided with a liberal arts foundation and then provided
specialized coursework and clinical training on how to assist people with
physical, mental, emotional, or social disabilities to lead more productive
lives. Since the BSRS degree is a professional degree versus a general
undergraduate degree, students are often poised for more competitive
employment offers and graduate school options. Four general,
post-baccalaureate career possibilities exist, depending on the needs and
interests of students:
(1) Graduate study in Rehabilitation
Counseling
(2) Graduate study in other helping
professions (e.g., Counseling, Social Work, etc. )
(3) Graduate study in Allied
Professions (e.g., OT, ST, PT, etc.)
(4) Employment in a wide range of human
services
(1) Graduate Study in Rehabilitation Counseling:
After completion of the baccalaureate in Rehabilitation Services, many
students further their expertise in the area of Rehabilitation by pursuing a
graduate degree in Rehabilitation Counseling. There are over 80 graduate RC
programs in the nation with the LSUHSC MHSRC program ranking in the
top 15 nationally. BSRS students who pursue admission to the LSUHSC program
may qualify for advanced standing in the MHSRC program if accepted. Students
who are accepted for advanced standing may accelerate the MHSRC curriculum in
order to graduate one semester early.
(2) Graduate Study in other Helping Professions (e.g., Counseling, Social
Work, etc. )
Many students graduating with a BSRS degree have pursued graduate degree
options in Counseling, Social Work, Education, etc. Since BSRS students
complete 15 credit hours of graduate coursework and are required to complete
600 hours of clinical field experience, students are well-prepared for the
rigors of graduate studies. Past students are quoted as stating,
“I had a better understanding of what to expect from graduate school
because of my training in the BSRS program”.
“I was much better prepared than most of my graduate school peers”.
(3) Graduate Study in other Allied Health Professions (OT, PT, ST, etc.)
The general nature of the degree encourages students to consider graduate
study in allied rehabilitation areas, such as occupational therapy, physical
therapy, speech therapy, etc. Because some of these professions may tend to
specialize in a specific aspect of the individual with a disability, a
broader, holistic, undergraduate rehabilitation education is desirable.
Students interested in other allied health fields are provided the opportunity
to complete 2 fieldwork experiences with in the BSRS program. Past students
are quoted as stating,
“I felt I was a better OT student because I had a good foundation for what
rehabilitation was”
“With a BSRS and a grad degree in Speech, I feel like I have the full
package, not only how to do therapy with my patients, but how to emphathize
with their unique situations – that is what the BSRS program taught me”
(4) Employment in a wide range of human services
Baccalaureate graduates have the background to perform functions related to
counseling under the supervision of a graduate-trained rehabilitation
professional. Functions related to counseling include such skills as intake
interviewing and screening, community outreach, case-finding, and routine
service coordination and case-recording. The use of the baccalaureate
individual, under the supervision of either a graduate-trained rehabilitation
counselor or allied rehabilitation professional, enables graduate-trained
professional to be involved in more complex activities, such as advanced
professional skill applications, program management, and research.
Consequently, this type of education—with its humanistic orientation—is
adaptable to other career areas that emphasize human relations or
interpersonal skills.
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JOB SKILLS AND TITLES FOR BSRS GRADUATES
Examples of skills that graduates with a
baccalaureate in Rehabilitation Services should be able to perform under the
supervision of a graduate-trained rehabilitation professional include the
following:
1. Intake interviewing and screening
2. Community outreach and case-finding
3. Routine service coordination and
case-recording activities
4. Routine work evaluation and work adjustment
techniques and procedures
5. Job development and placement activities
6. Basic client-advocate activities
7. Various, specialized, administrative staff
duties and assignments
8. Behavior management procedures
9. Work in substance abuse facilities
Examples of job titles for which graduates of
the LSUHSC BSRS would qualify include:
1. rehabilitation counseling
technician 11. rehabilitation specialist
2. service
coordinator 12. case manager
3. placement
specialist 13. interviewer
4. social skills
instructor 14. disability prevention
specialist
5. vocational evaluator
technician 15. eligibility worker
6. corrections classification
specialist 16. research technician
7. mental health
technician 17. independent living
specialist
8. client-advocate
representative 18. job coach/employment specialist
9. work adjustment
technician
10. group home counselor/teaching
parent
Institutional settings which may employ
graduates would include organizations or agencies, public or private,
concerned with physical disability, developmental disabilities, crisis
intervention, mental illness, geriatrics, corrections, drug addiction,
alcoholism, employment, human resources development, community-based youth
employment, and therapeutic recreation.
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