ABSTRACT

Published with the sponsorship of the Trainers of School Psychologists, this two volume handbook examines the essential tenets of the school psychology profession, critically reviews training and practice issues, and evaluates how traditional and changing skills and issues translate into meeting the needs of children and the systems that serve them.

Volume II extends the discussion of the training of school psychologists from Volume I to an examination of issues critical to the practice of school psychology, focusing on the roles of the supervisor as trainer in different contexts. Each chapter raises issues for university training in a manner that facilitates the dialogue between university and field trainers.  This volume also considers issues of professional development, credentialing, and developing a professional identity, topics that predominate in practice settings yet are typically not addressed in any school psychology text.  It concludes by offering recommendations on how the collaboration between university and field-based education can be further improved in the future to anticipate and meet the needs of the next generation of professionals and the children in their care.

part I|15 pages

Contemporary school psychology training

chapter 1|13 pages

Is everything old new again?

School psychology training past, present, and future

part II|92 pages

What about supervision anyway?

part III|117 pages

Difficult dialogues

chapter 7|18 pages

Multicultural competence and diversity

University and field collaboration

chapter 8|24 pages

Problematic behaviors

Mediating differences and negotiating change

chapter 9|16 pages

Ethical and legal challenges

Negotiating chang

chapter 11|19 pages

Developing professional identity

Values, behaviors, and reputation

part IV|79 pages

Professional issues

part V|21 pages

Into the future

chapter 17|11 pages

Creating congruent change

Linking research to practice

chapter 18|7 pages

Envisioning the future

Looking into the crystal ball