Pat Harrison Jack Cummings Susan Gorin Ron Palomares Shane Jimerson Beth Doll APA Annual Convention Toronto, ON August 2003

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Transcript Pat Harrison Jack Cummings Susan Gorin Ron Palomares Shane Jimerson Beth Doll APA Annual Convention Toronto, ON August 2003

Pat Harrison
Jack Cummings
Susan Gorin
Ron Palomares
Shane Jimerson Beth Doll
APA Annual Convention
Toronto, ON
August 2003
School Psychology
Futures Conference
Brief Background
Next Steps FYI and
Involvement—You Are
Cordially Invited
Basic Principles to Guide Our Future
Currently, and for the foreseeable future, we
are faced with a shortage of school
psychologists that threatens our capacity to
meet the needs of children in schools.
While the profession must increase efforts
to recruit and retain professionals in our
field, such strategies alone will be
insufficient and inadequate to increase our
capacity to meet the imminent needs of
children, families, and schools.
Principles (cont)
As a result, changes in school psychology
practices and service delivery will be
required to use the resources we have to
maximize the benefits to the children and
schools that we serve.
Prevention and early intervention will be
necessary to achieve positive outcomes
for children, families, and schools.
Principles (cont.)
Evidence-based practices will be
necessary to achieve positive outcomes
for children, families, and schools.
In order to be effective, school
psychological services must demonstrate
respect for and understanding of diversity
factors for children, families and schools,
including factors related to cultural,
individual, and role differences.
Principles (cont.)
Change will be facilitated by using
electronic tools for communication. High
quality resources may be collaboratively
developed and disseminated.
Problem-Solving Model
At the core of Futures planning during 2002
conference as well as in follow-up
activities
Problem-Solving Model (cont.)
Define critical issues and desired
outcomes
Identify threats/opportunities
Brainstorm solutions/strategies
Problem-Solving Model (cont.)
Develop action plans
Implement action plans
Evaluate outcomes
Fifteen Priority Goals Form a
National Agenda for School
Psychology
Ron Palomares
Priority Goal:
Improved academic competence
and school success for all children
Advocacy and Public Policy: Advocate for
universal early prevention and intervention
programs that emphasize language,
cognitive, and social-emotional
development and are placed in the context
of ethnicity, gender, SES, gender, and
language.
Improved academic competence
(cont.)
Practice: Ensure that assessment practices of
school psychologists are empirically linked to
strategies to improve academic performance,
and that those assessment practices account
for the influence of ethnicity, SES, gender, and
language on learning outcomes.
In-service Training: Develop and implement inservice training for school psychologists related
to universal early prevention and intervention
programs.
Priority Goal:
Improved social-emotional
functioning for all children
Advocacy and Public Policy: Promote the
availability of a comprehensive range of
services, from supportive and inclusive
placements through interim alternative
placements for students with severe
emotional and behavioral disorders
Improved social-emotional functioning
(cont.)
Collaboration and Communication:
Educate all stakeholders about the
importance of social-emotional
competence for children.
Practice: Ensure that school psychologists
develop a systematic plan in all schools to
reduce social-emotional barriers to
learning.
Priority Goal:
Enhanced family school partnerships
and parental involvement in schools
Research and Knowledge Base: Identify
evidence-based models of effective familyschool partnerships.
Family school partnerships (cont.)
Practice: Ensure that school psychologists
engage in activities to change the culture
of schooling to ensure that families are
integral partners in the educational
process of children.
Pre-service Training: Change pre-service
education and training of school
psychologist candidates to infuse a focus
on families as integral partners in the
educational process.
Priority Goal :
More effective education and
instruction for all learners
Research and Knowledge Base: Identify key
components of effective instruction of all
learners, including evidence-based approaches
to prevention and early intervention for learning
problems.
In-service Training: Provide in-service training
for school psychologists in the use of a databased problem solving model to implement
evidence-based instruction and interventions.
More effective education (cont.)
Pre-service/Inservice Training: Implement
a national pre-service and in-service
training initiative for school psychologists
regarding effective instruction.
Priority Goal:
Increased child and family services
in schools that promote health and
mental health and are integrated
with community services
Practice: Define and promote population-based
service delivery in schools and school psychology.
In-service Training: Prepare current practitioners to
implement a public health model of school psychology.
Pre-service Training: Prepare future practitioners to
implement a public health model of school psychology.
Action Plans from the
Conference Are Being Refined
and Implemented Nationally.
Examples of action plans are:
Develop resources (e.g., conferences, books,
etc) that provide inservice and preservice
training for school psychologists to increase
skills in problem-solving assessment and
intervention.
Identify key components of effective
interventions for improving social-emotionalbehavioral competence of all students, and
promote the use of evidence-based approaches
among school psychologists and
interdisciplinary professionals to prevent socialemotional-behavioral difficulties and to intervene
effectively.
Identify outcome-based literature that describes
processes and procedures related to family-school
partnership models.
Identify models of “best practice” related to familyschool partnerships for use in training programs and
practice settings.
Create a comprehensive model of problem-solvingbased assessment and intervention practices that
takes into account the diverse array of ecological
variables that influence students’ likelihood of school
success
Articulate a public health model in school
psychology, including basic tenets and a framework
Identify school psychologists and school psychology
practice sites that are applying public health
principles; analyze and identify common themes,
barriers, facilitator
Technology as a tool
Jack Cummings
Supporting attainment of
priority goals
COMMUNICATION
COMMUNICATION
– Internal
School Psychologist – School Psychologist
– External
Parents
Students
Teachers
Administrators
Internal Communication Information
Internal Communication Dynamic
Internal Communication Dynamic
www.indiana.edu/futures/
E-Forum – electronic
discussion forum
Internal Communication Dynamic
Live Webcasts – with interaction via email
Online classes – USF
Collaborative classes - IU
External Communication
How do we enhance parent
communication and family school
partnerships?
– School District Homepage
Miami-Dade Psych Services
Traditional Barriers
 Hardware
 Software
 Technical Skills
 Fear of Unknown
WHAT NEXT?
Susan Gorin
Continued collaborative
activities among associations
to implement a national
agenda and national action
plans
Future Publications
School Psychology Review and School
Psychology Quarterly, joint issue
links to archived CQ articles that relate to
Priority Goals
Special Issue on Psychologist Shortage–
Psychology in the Schools
Special Issue on Futures and Consultation
– Journal of Educational and
Psychological Consultation
Integration of the Future’s Priority
Goals with Other Associations:
Each Can Contribute to the Future’s
Agenda
NASP President, Dan Miller, will include a
Futures Conference activity at each of the 5
regional meetings NASP holds throughout
the country in the fall .
The priority goals relate well to the
organization of NASP’s new strategic plan
and the NASP Blueprint.
Peg Dawson led a session with state
association presidents at NASP. John
DeRoschers will coordinate state planning.
– New Hampshire
– Maryland
– etc.
Division 16 – earlier this week devoted an
entire session to discussion of the Priority
Goals
School Psychology Leadership
Roundtable
Organizations will continue to work together to
monitor progress on action plans generated
as a result of the Futures Conference
communication about association activities
possible collaboration on some projects.
Research, Scholarship, and the Future
of School Psychology
Shane Jimerson
University of California – Santa Barbara
 It appears that each of the elements of the Action
Plans are dependent upon quality research and
scholarship.
 The future scholarship of participants of the 2003
School Psychology Research Collaboration
Conference will be related to each of the 5 priority
goals that emerged from the Futures Conference.
 The SPRCC is an important mechanism to facilitate
collaborative scholarship to complete the necessary
research and establish the knowledge base for
School Psychology Research
Collaboration Conference
April 7, 2003 - Toronto, Canada
Sponsored by:
Society for the Study of School Psychology (SSSP)
National Association of School Psychologists (NASP)
American Psychological Association (APA) Division 16 School Psychology
American Psychological Association (APA) Education Directorate
Elsevier Science, Inc. - ScienceDirect
SPRCC Importance & Background
 Promoting professional relationships and
collaborative research in the field of school
psychology is valuable for the future of the
profession
 The SPRCC is envisioned as a mechanism
to facilitate the efforts of early career
scholars and general scholarship in the field
of school psychology
Goals of the 2003 SPRCC
 To enhance the research efforts and skills of early
career researchers
 To encourage collaboration among scholars
 To facilitate multi-site research
 To address complex and important problems
relevant to education and the practice of school
psychology
SPRCC Participants
Early Career Scholars
Catalyst Scholars
School District Colleagues
Graduate Student Affiliates
2003 SPRCC Breakout Groups
 Aggression/ Violence/ Crisis
 Assessment/ Cognitive/ Diversity
 Reading Assessment/ Intervention / Literacy
 Social/ Emotional/ Behavioral
 School Systems/ Teachers/ Climate
2005
School Psychology Research
Collaboration Conference
Co-Chaired by Shane Jimerson and Amanda VanDerHeyden
Sponsored by:
Society for the Study of School Psychology (SSSP)
National Association of School Psychologists (NASP)
American Psychological Association (APA) Division 16 School Psychology
American Psychological Association (APA) Education Directorate
Elsevier Science, Inc. - ScienceDirect
Beth Doll – University of Nebraska
A personal response to the future
 Why is the Future’s Conference like an
elephant?
 What happened to the shortage?
 Does technology tap at our door or seep
around it?
 Is our’s a Rocketeer vision of our future?
WHAT NEXT?
Pat Harrison
What can national associations do next?
What can state associations and local groups do
next?
What can school psychology training programs
do next?
What can individual school psychologists do
next?