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Featured researches published by Lucy Hearne.


British Journal of Guidance & Counselling | 2015

The role of the regular teacher in a whole school approach to guidance counselling in Ireland

Lucy Hearne; James Galvin

A whole school approach to guidance counselling has been promulgated by Irish policy-makers as a model of good practice in the delivery of guidance counselling in the post-primary sector since the 1998 Education Act (DES, 2005a, 2009, 2012). This approach to guidance counselling provision is viewed as a whole school responsibility where schools are expected to collaboratively develop a school guidance plan to support the needs of their students. The role of the regular teacher in a whole school approach to guidance counselling has received very little attention either in the Irish education system or in empirical research. This article will address this deficit through its discussion of a case study carried out in one school in 2012. It will position the findings from the study in the context of the re-allocation of post-primary guidance counselling provision in the national Budget 2012 that has witnessed the substantive erosion of the guidance counselling service in the last two years.


Australian journal of career development | 2011

The consideration of a constructivist evaluation framework in adult guidance practice

Lucy Hearne

This article explores the findings of a doctoral study that examined the measurement of individual progression in the Irish Adult Education Guidance Initiative. The critical constructivist stance of the study challenges the prevalence of the positivist paradigm to evaluate long-term outcomes in adult guidance. The research highlights the divergence in the discourse between clients and practitioners, and that of policy-makers on the concept of progression. The outcome is the proposal of a constructivist evaluation framework for future practice.


British Journal of Guidance & Counselling | 2017

The ‘tyranny of time’: getting to the heart of the impact of educational cuts on the provision of guidance counselling in Ireland

E. Leahy; J. O’Flaherty; Lucy Hearne

ABSTRACT The Irish Education Act (Government of Ireland 1998) stipulates that each young person in secondary school in Ireland is entitled to access ‘appropriate’ guidance. It has been argued that this very right has been eroded since Budget 2012, where resource re-allocations in guidance counselling are obstructing the requirement for schools to implement this section of the Act. This qualitative study explored the effects of ‘educational cutbacks’ from the perspective of guidance counsellors. Findings from interviews with guidance counsellors, suggest that the effects of such cutbacks in guidance counselling are far-reaching and ultimately students are the one’s losing out. The paper proposes that there is a need to reinstate guidance counselling hours to allow guidance counsellors provide a comprehensive service to young people – which they are entitled to.


British Journal of Guidance & Counselling | 2017

Guidance counselling as a whole school responsibility in the Irish post primary sector

Lucy Hearne; Tom Geary; Noelle Martin

ABSTRACT This paper will deliberate upon the relevance of guidance counselling as a ‘whole school’ responsibility in the context of recent policy and practice changes in the Irish post primary sector since the Government of Ireland Budget 2012. Pertinent issues including the complexities of delivering a whole school approach to guidance counselling during a period of resource rationalisation will be addressed through the findings from recent case study research [Hearne, L., Geary, T., & Martin, N. (2016). A single case study of a whole school approach to guidance counselling in an Irish post-primary school; Case report. Retrieved from University of Limerick website: http://www.ul.ie/soedu/node/1481]. A single explanatory case study methodology investigated the complex phenomenon and interventions of whole school guidance counselling in a mixed gender school in the context of increasing demands for evidence-based data and methodological sophistication in lifelong guidance [European Lifelong Guidance Policy Network. (2015a). The evidence base on lifelong guidance; A guide to key findings for effective policy and practice, extended summary. Jyväskylä: Kariteam; Hearne, L. (2009). Towards an understanding of the measurement of individual progression in adult guidance (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). Waterford Institute of Technology, Waterford; Stake, R. E. (2004). Standards-based & responsive evaluation. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Yin, R. K. (2009). Case study research: Design and methods (4th ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Yin, R. K. (2014). Case study research (5th ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage].


Journal of Vocational Behavior | 2012

Resilience and career adaptability: Qualitative studies of adult career counseling

Jenny Bimrose; Lucy Hearne


Archive | 2005

'Opening a Door', Evaluating the Benefits of Guidance for the Adult Client: A Report.

Lucy Hearne


Archive | 2012

The resilient adult guidance practitioner: a study of the impact of high-touch work in challenging times

Lucy Hearne


Archive | 2016

A single case study of a whole school approach to guidance counselling in an Irish post-primary school: case report

Lucy Hearne; Tom Geary; Noelle Martin


Archive | 2016

A case study analysis of a whole school approach to guidance counselling in a voluntary school in the Irish post primary sector

Lucy Hearne; Paul King; Neil Kenny; Tom Geary


Adult Learner: The Irish Journal of Adult and Community Education | 2010

Progression measurement in adult guidance in Ireland: a contested discourse

Lucy Hearne

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Tom Geary

University of Limerick

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Paul King

Dublin City University

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Neil Kenny

Dublin City University

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Noelle Martin

National University of Ireland

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