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Maital, Sharone L. – School Psychology Review, 2000
A longitudinal consultation project with teachers in an early education program for Ethiopian immigrant children in Israel is presented to illustrate the application of the reciprocal distancing model in cross-cultural consultation. Evidence for disengagement as well as joining of teachers and challenging children despite frustration and…
Descriptors: Consultation Programs, Counseling Techniques, Cultural Differences, Cultural Pluralism
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Nastasi, Bonnie K.; Varjas, Kristen; Bernstein, Rachel; Iavasena, Asoka – School Psychology Review, 2000
Describes a participatory approach to consultation that builds upon contemporary models of research and practice and is designed to address the culture-specific needs of individuals and systems. The Participatory Culture-Specific Consultation (PCSC) model embodies a participatory interpersonal process and relies on ethnographic and action research…
Descriptors: Consultation Programs, Cultural Differences, Cultural Pluralism, Intervention
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Henning-Stout, Mary; Meyers, Joel – School Psychology Review, 2000
The research and practice of consultation affect people from across the range of human diversity. Proposes that the emergent literature of cross-cultural consultation, including the contributions to this special issue, offers valuable information for increasing the responsiveness of consultation in schools. Researchers and practitioners must…
Descriptors: Consultation Programs, Counseling Techniques, Cultural Differences, Cultural Pluralism
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Shapiro, Edward S. – School Psychology Review, 2000
Argues that the typical school psychology approach of solving problems one student at a time will not be successful in impacting the big problems of illiteracy, technological and mathematics deficiencies, writing, and problem solving. Proposes that the need to build academic competence and resilience through early intervention and prevention…
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Early Intervention, Instructional Development, Prevention
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Dawson, Margaret M. – School Psychology Review, 2000
Presents a response to "School Psychology from an Instructional Perspective: Solving Big, Not Little Problems" (this issue). The author considers specific obstacles toward problem solving, particularly in a public school system that knowingly and unknowingly throws up obstacles for school psychologists. (GCP)
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Early Intervention, Instructional Development, Prevention
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Ysseldyke, Jim – School Psychology Review, 2000
Presents a response to "School Psychology from an Instructional Perspective: Solving Big, Not Little Problems" (this issue). The author supports Shapiro's arguments but worries much about the barriers that would have to be overcome to enable such a paradigm shift to occur. (GCP)
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Early Intervention, Instructional Development, Prevention
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Rosenberg, Steven L. – School Psychology International, 2002
The Positive Peer Group Intervention Program is designed to improve self-concept among at-risk students. Teachers were asked to identify children showing any one of four functional and/or dysfunctional characteristics of leaders. Since each group demonstrated qualitatively different social skills, it was hypothesized that the program would impact…
Descriptors: High Risk Students, Interpersonal Competence, Junior High Schools, Peer Relationship
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Hughes, Jan N.; Cavell, Timothy A.; Prasad-Gaur, Archna – Journal of School Psychology, 2001
Uses longitudinal data to determine whether a positive view of perceived peer acceptance is a risk factor for continued aggression and social rejection for aggressive children. Results indicate that perceived peer acceptance did not predict aggression. However, children who reported higher levels of perceived peer acceptance received lower actual…
Descriptors: Aggression, High Risk Students, Interpersonal Relationship, Peer Acceptance
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Barnett, David W.; And Others – Journal of School Psychology, 1995
Questions concerning school psychology services for children of diverse ethnic groups have related to problem identification, acceptability of interventions, the efficacy of special programs and interventions and the preparation of professionals to deal with multicultural and cross-cultural practice. Reviews models of ethnic validity and examines…
Descriptors: Child Psychology, Consultation Programs, Cross Cultural Studies, Cross Cultural Training
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Brendtro, Larry K.; Long, Nicholas J. – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2002
This paper highlights the scientific rationale and research base for Life Space Crisis Intervention, a psychoeducational model used with aggressive children. The model draws from a broad theory base to meet the diverse needs of troubled children. The method necessitates forming an alliance with youth and sees problems as opportunities for teaching…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aggression, Children, Counseling Techniques
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Curtis, Michael J.; Hunley, Sawyer A.; Grier, Elizabeth Chesno – Psychology in the Schools, 2004
The findings of earlier studies are reviewed and results of analyses of recent data are reported in presenting an overview of the current and possible future status of school psychology in the United States. Recognizing that legislation could have major, but as yet unclear, implications for the field, projections suggest that school psychology is…
Descriptors: School Psychology, School Psychologists, Personnel Needs, Counselor Training
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Tharinger, Deborah J.; Palomares, Ronald S. – Psychology in the Schools, 2004
The authors were asked to respond to the shortage of school psychologists from the perspective of the Division of School Psychology of the American Psychological Association and the American Psychological Association (APA), and also chose to address the larger issue of the shortage and lack of accessibility of mental health services for children…
Descriptors: Health Services, School Psychology, Psychological Services, Mental Health Programs
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Jung, Taehee; Kim, Myung-Hee – School Psychology International, 2005
This study sought to determine whether Korean young children exhibit distinct profiles of intellectual strengths and weaknesses based on Project Spectrum, and to find the working style differences of children among strength, no strength/weakness and weakness domains. Project Spectrum helped to find in which domains each child had strength and/or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Multiple Intelligences, Young Children, Child Development
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Masten, Ann S. – School Psychology Review, 2003
A persuasive case is presented by Ringeisen, Henderson, and Hoagwood (2003) for the significance of school contexts in child development and the potential for improving child mental health and achievement through more sophisticated, integrative, multilevel, and multidisciplinary models of how schools and children change. This perspective reflects…
Descriptors: Prevention, Mental Health, Psychopathology, Child Development
Bray, Melissa A., Ed.; Kehle, Thomas J., Ed. – Oxford University Press, 2011
With its roots in clinical and educational psychology, school psychology is an ever-changing field that encompasses a diversity of topics. "The Oxford Handbook of School Psychology" synthesizes the most vital and relevant literature in all of these areas, producing a state-of-the-art, authoritative resource for practitioners,…
Descriptors: School Psychology, Problem Solving, Delivery Systems, Cognitive Ability
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