ABSTRACT

Ethnic minority children now comprise over 75 percent of students in 100 of the largest cities in the United States. However, these students have not been given equal access to, nor benefited from, the contemporary mental health system as have their non-minority peers. TEMAS (Tell-Me-A-Story) Assessment in Multicultural Societies examines the health/mental care system in which professional service providers, including psychologists, labor to offer quality care for youth in the United States. The authors ardently support the use of the TEMAS assessment instrument as a useful tool for diagnosis of all youngsters, particularly its use on the growing population of minority children and adolescents.



Part I presents a rationale and context for employing TEMAS. Introductory chapters describe the mental health status of the population at-risk, as well as systems of care for youth where assessment and intervention are components. Topics to follow highlight a history of positive TEMAS test reviews with the detail required by instructors for preparing dedicated TEMAS courses. The volume thoroughly outlines cross-cultural studies and illustrates case examples of European-American, Hispanic/Latino, Asian-American, and forensic studies.



TEMAS (Tell-Me-A-Story) Assessment in Multicultural Societies brings practical insight to instructors who teach standard assessment courses; clinicians, counselors, and school psychologists; assessment specialists; and administrators concerned with mental health services designed for children and adolescents.

part II|126 pages

Essentials of Temas Assessment

chapter 5|36 pages

Administration and Scoring

chapter 6|28 pages

Psychometric Properties

chapter 7|60 pages

Cross-Cultural Findings

part III|5 pages

Clinical Utility of Temas: Case Studies

chapter 8|26 pages

European American Case Study

chapter 9|24 pages

Hispanic/Latino Case Study

chapter 10|28 pages

Asian American Case Studies

chapter 11|56 pages

Diverse Cross-Cultural Studies

chapter 12|32 pages

Forensic Case Study