Substance Abuse Counseling · Illinois
Substance Abuse Counseling colleges in Illinois
Substance Abuse Counseling program coverage in Illinois is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Substance Abuse Counseling prepares you to help people prevent and recover from drug and alcohol addiction through individual and group counseling, crisis intervention, and treatment planning.
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What you'll study in a Substance Abuse Counseling program
- Psychology of addiction and the stages of substance use, dependence, and recovery
- Pharmacology and behavioral effects of alcohol and other abused substances
- Individual and group counseling skills and group dynamics
- Screening, assessment, and substance-abuse identification methods
- Crisis intervention and suicide-risk response
- Treatment modalities such as motivational interviewing, cognitive-behavioral approaches, and relapse prevention
- Treatment planning, progress documentation, and treatment evaluation
- Co-occurring mental health disorders and trauma-informed care
- Professional ethics, confidentiality law, and applicable regulations
Where a Substance Abuse Counseling degree can lead
- Substance Abuse Counselor
- Behavioral Disorder Counselor
- Mental Health Counselor
- Case Manager
- Prevention Specialist
- Recovery Support Specialist
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 substance abuse, behavioral disorder, and mental health counselors median $59,190).
Substance Abuse Counseling studies how addiction develops and how to help individuals and families move through prevention, intervention, treatment, and recovery. Coursework grounds you in the psychology and pharmacology of abused substances, how drugs and alcohol affect the brain and behavior, alongside the sociology of addiction and the way family, culture, and community shape it. You build practical clinical skills in individual and group counseling, crisis intervention, screening and assessment using standard substance-abuse identification tools, and the documentation of treatment plans and progress. Programs also cover the main treatment modalities, motivational interviewing, cognitive and behavioral approaches, relapse prevention, and harm reduction, along with treatment evaluation, patient education, group dynamics, and the professional ethics and confidentiality laws that govern this work. Where general Psychology studies the mind and behavior broadly and largely through research, this field concentrates on the hands-on counseling and case management of addiction and co-occurring conditions.
Many students enter with an associate or bachelor's degree, though specific roles, supervision requirements, and scope of practice depend heavily on state credentialing. Most states issue a tiered addiction-counseling credential, often using titles such as certified or licensed alcohol and drug counselor, that combines coursework, supervised clinical hours, and a written exam; required hours and reciprocity between states vary, so verify the path with your state board before enrolling. Graduates work in outpatient and residential treatment centers, hospitals and behavioral-health clinics, correctional and reentry programs, employee assistance programs, and community agencies, and some pursue a master's to qualify for independent or clinical licensure. A program is preparation for the credential and the work, not a guarantee of a job, and pay, caseloads, and demand vary by employer, setting, region, funding, and your experience.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of substance abuse, behavioral disorder, and mental health counselors, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $59,190 and projects employment to grow about 16.8% from 2024 to 2034; a master's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
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