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Peer reviewedSchrag, Judy A. – School Psychology Review, 1996
Children come to school each day with problems stemming from unmet physical, emotional, and social needs. In response, efforts to reform systems that provide services to these children have increased. Reform efforts have found flaws in the current delivery system. School psychologists are in unique position to provide significant contributions to…
Descriptors: Comprehensive School Health Education, Emotional Problems, Integrated Services, Personality Problems
Peer reviewedMcGrew, Kevin S.; Keith, Timothy Z.; Flanagan, Dawn P.; Vanderwood, Mike – School Psychology Review, 1997
Describes recent developments in intelligence theory, applied measurements, and research methodology that suggests new research is needed to reexamine the relative importance of both general and specific cognitive abilities in explaining school achievement. Presents summary of results that examines relationship between "g" and seven…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Measurement, Intelligence Tests
Peer reviewedCanter, Andrea S. – School Psychology Review, 1997
Urges that discussion of the future of intelligence testing differentiates the evolution of theory and research from trends in clinical (school-based) practice. States that school-based assessments will not be valued because they are efficient, mandated, or empirically linked to theories of cognition but because they are functionally and fairly…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Intelligence Tests, Outcomes of Education
Peer reviewedReeder, Glenn D.; Maccow, Gloria C.; Shaw, Steven R.; Swerdlik, Mark E.; Horton, Connie B.; Foster, Phil – School Psychology Review, 1997
Outlines a conceptualization of schools that offer medical, mental-health, and social services, giving special attention to three specific roles that school psychologists can fill in these schools: team member of an interdisciplinary group, coordinator of the group, or university-based consultant. Discusses implications for the training of school…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Graduate Study, Health
Peer reviewedSachs, Henry T.; Barrett, Rowland P. – School Psychology Review, 1995
Recognizing possible seizure disorders, medication side-effects, behavioral and cognitive effects of seizures, and their treatments are important skills for school psychologists because they affect 500,000 United States school-aged children attending regular education. A knowledgeable school professional serves a critical role in integrating…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Epilepsy, Medical Services
Peer reviewedPower, Thomas J.; DuPaul, George J.; Shapiro, Edward S.; Parrish, John M. – School Psychology Review, 1995
Pediatric school psychologists, experts in services to children with medical conditions, are needed in light of changes in public policy and educational practice. The role of a pediatric school psychologist might include advocating for childrens' social and educational needs, evaluating efficacy of intervention, and facilitating effective…
Descriptors: Childhood Needs, Children, Demonstration Programs, Diseases
Peer reviewedMcConaughy, Stephanie H.; Achenbach, Thomas M. – School Psychology Review, 1996
Examines the predictive power of child interview for differentiating matched sample of children with emotional and behavior disorders (EBD) or learning disabilities (LD), and nonreferred children. The Semistructured Clinical Interview for Children and Adolescents (SCICA) was administered. Parents completed the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL), and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavior Disorders, Children, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedDebaryshe, Barbara D.; Fryxell, Dale – Psychology in the Schools, 1998
Presents a model of the development of anger in family and peer contexts. States that children's awareness of anger depends on exposure to models of anger expression and conflict resolution, parental emotional coaching, and opportunities to practice conflict resolution. Proposes that these strategies carry over into peer relationships. (MKA)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Anger, Conflict Resolution, Emotional Development
Peer reviewedGordon, Phyllis A.; Feldman, David; Ballard, Ellen M. – Physical Disabilities: Education and Related Services, 1998
Discusses the usefulness of team collaboration when working with students with chronic health and/or other disabilities and the manner in which rehabilitation psychologists function in this process. Notes the values and roles of rehabilitation psychology and ways rehabilitation psychologists can enhance the education process for these students.…
Descriptors: Chronic Illness, Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Integrated Services
Peer reviewedThuen, Elin; Bru, Edvin – School Psychology International, 2000
Explores how learning environment dimensions are related to on-task-orientation, and how these relations are mediated by students' perceptions of the meaningfulness of schoolwork. For school psychologists, results seem to imply an increased focus on the learning environment, and particularly on the importance of the social emotional dimensions for…
Descriptors: Assignments, Educational Environment, Emotional Response, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedKikas, Eve – School Psychology International, 1999
Studies the expectations for school psychological services of Estonian teachers and school psychologists and the real problems psychologists deal with in schools. Results find that the problems that need the intervention of a psychologist are perceived differently by teachers and psychologists. Teachers tend to consider child-centered services…
Descriptors: Counselor Attitudes, Counselor Teacher Cooperation, Educational Diagnosis, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedMeara, Naomi M.; And Others – Counseling Psychologist, 1996
Suggests that integrating both principle ethics and virtue ethics into the professional standards of the counseling profession will provide a coherent structure for enhancing the ethical competence of psychologists and counselors. Virtue ethics, rooted in the narratives and aspirations of specific communities, can be particularly helpful to…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Codes of Ethics, Counselors, Decision Making
Peer reviewedBlankemeyer, Maureen; Flannery, Daniel J.; Vazsonyi, Alexander T. – Psychology in the Schools, 2002
Study assessed the role of children's aggression and three indices of social competence (peer-preferred behaviors, teacher-preferred behaviors, school adjustment) in students' perceived relationships with their teachers among elementary school students. Poor school adjustment, particularly for boys, was associated with more negatively perceived…
Descriptors: Aggression, Elementary School Students, Elementary Schools, Interpersonal Competence
Peer reviewedMiller, David N.; DuPaul, George J.; Lutz, J. Gary – School Psychology Quarterly, 2002
Examines the acceptability and effectiveness ratings of three psychosocial interventions for childhood depression among school psychologist practitioners. Interventions included cognitive restructuring, self-control therapy, and social skills training. Cognitive restructuring and self-control therapy were rated as significantly more acceptable and…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Restructuring, Counseling Effectiveness, Counselor Attitudes
Peer reviewedChae, Paul Kyuman – Psychology in the Schools, 1999
The Test of Variable Attention (TOVA), widely used in the assessment of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, was studied along with the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children III (WISC-III). Explores whether the TOVA is a measure of psychomotor speed function rather than sustained attention. Results indicated that there was no correlation…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Disorders, Behavior Disorders, Behavioral Science Research, Elementary Secondary Education


