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Rachel Stein – Communique, 2025
Mental health for preschool students has not always been seen as the purview of school psychology. However, school psychologists can have a powerful impact by supporting the needs of young children. Research has shown that many children are not emotionally, socially, behaviorally, or academically ready for kindergarten. This was further…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Mental Health, School Psychology, Early Experience
Lichtenstein, Robert – Communique, 2023
The field of school psychology, built on a foundation of evidence-based practice, has produced an abundance of research to inform school-based practice. However, this empirical tradition has not been applied to the predominant activity in which school psychologists are engaged: psychoeducational assessment. Despite numerous critiques and proposed…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Psychological Evaluation, Psychological Testing, Outcomes of Treatment
Szczesniak, Lisa A.; Lovett, Benjamin J. – Communique, 2022
Students feeling anxiety about tests is a perennial problem, but the topic is rarely covered formally in either school psychologists' training or in journals in the field. Admittedly, test anxiety is not a recognized psychiatric disorder, and it is generally insufficient on its own to lead to special education or a disability accommodation plan.…
Descriptors: Test Anxiety, COVID-19, Pandemics, Mental Health
Laracy, Seth D.; Ridgard, Tamique J.; DuPaul, George J. – Communique, 2015
Studies have shown that sleep is critical to students' functioning at school. School psychologists can effectively assess sleep habits in only a few minutes and can often improve students' sleep with brief interventions. This article reviews the importance of sleep and provides school psychologists with strategies for assessment and intervention.…
Descriptors: Sleep, Guidelines, Intervention, School Psychologists
Lichtenstein, Robert – Communique, 2014
This is the final installment of a 3-part series of articles proposing substantial changes in assessment practices, urging school psychologists to write reports that are responsive to the needs of primary consumers--parents and educators, in particular. According to the author, the prevailing practice of writing long, complex reports with a focus…
Descriptors: Psychoeducational Methods, Readability, School Psychologists, Scores
Lichtenstein, Robert – Communique, 2013
Assessment of human abilities and behaviors is enormously enhanced by the use of standardized assessment measures that yield norm-referenced scores. As school psychologists, they rely on quantitative findings to anchor their judgments about a child's developmental and educational functioning and to enhance our capacity to draw diagnostic…
Descriptors: Test Results, School Psychologists, Psychoeducational Methods, Scores
Lichtenstein, Robert – Communique, 2013
As school psychologists know, and as a recent survey confirms, school psychologists devote considerably more time to conducting mandated assessments for special education than to any other professional activity (Curtis, Castillo, & Gelley, 2012). A major part of this activity involves documenting assessment findings in the form of a written…
Descriptors: Psychoeducational Methods, Technical Writing, Test Results, School Psychologists
Huebner, Scott – Communique, 2012
School professionals, including school psychologists, have often operated from a problem- or deficit-based perspective with a focus on identifying and remediating psychoeducational disorders in children and adolescents. However, positive psychologists have argued that an exclusive focus on deficits does not offer a comprehensive perspective of…
Descriptors: Psychology, School Psychologists, Program Evaluation, Intervention
Cunningham, Jennifer; Mendez, Linda M. Raffaele; Sundman-Wheat, Ashley N. – Communique, 2011
Students with emotion dysregulation have significant difficulty modulating emotional reactions, particularly in response to frustration or challenge. These children can present with a variety of DSM diagnoses in schools, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), major depressive disorder (MDD),…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, School Psychology, Best Practices, Emotional Problems