Or. Admin. Code § 584-245-0200 - Scope of School Psychologist
(1)
Scope: An Oregon School Psychologist or Professional School Psychologist
License or registration is required to perform any one of the following duties
in public schools, school districts, or education service districts:
(a) Provide psychological services that
enhance academic performance;
(b)
Design strategies and programs to address problems of adjustment;
(c) Consult with other educators and parents
on issues of social development and behavioral and academic
difficulties;
(d) Conduct
psycho-educational assessment for purposes of identifying special
needs;
(e) Provide psychological
counseling for individuals, groups and families; and
(f) Coordinate intervention strategies for
management of individuals and school-wide crises.
(2) Responsibilities: The School Psychologist
and Professional School Psychologist License authorizes the holder to perform
the following duties:
(a) Use data-based
decision making to choose assessment methods for identifying strengths and
needs; for developing effective interventions, services, and programs; and for
measuring progress and outcomes within a multi-tiered system of
supports.
(b) Consult and
collaborate with individuals, families, groups, and systems, to promote
effective services in an equitable manner. Consultation and collaboration
include but are not limited to use of the problem-solving process when
planning, implementing, and evaluating academic and mental and behavioral
health services with diverse audiences, including students, parents, teachers,
school personnel, policy makers, community leaders, and other professionals
across disciplines.
(c) Inform
academic intervention and instructional supports with the use of evidence-based
curricula and instructional strategies.
(A)
Promote interventions and accommodations to help students enhance their
capacity to be self-regulated learners.
(B) Recommend changes to instruction based on
student responsiveness to interventions.
(C) Use empirically based research on
learning and cognition to inform the development of effective instructional
strategies to promote student learning at the individual, group, and systems
levels.
(D) Use culturally
responsive and developmentally appropriate assessment techniques to identify
and diagnose disabilities that affect development and learning.
(E) Promote intervention fidelity during the
development, implementation, and evaluation of instructional
interventions.
(d)
Provide mental and behavioral health services and interventions that promote
resilience and positive behavior, support socialization and adaptive skills,
and enhance mental and behavioral health in the context of a comprehensive
framework.
(A) Use data to identify students
who may require individualized support and provide a continuum of
developmentally appropriate and culturally responsive mental and behavioral
health services, including individual and group counseling, behavioral
coaching, classroom and school-wide social-emotional learning programs,
positive behavior supports, and parent education and support.
(B) Address issues that include the impact of
trauma on social, emotional, and behavioral functioning; and, in collaboration
with others, work to implement practices to reduce the effects of trauma on
learning and behavior.
(C) Use
culturally responsive and developmentally appropriate assessment techniques to
identify emotional and behavioral disabilities.
(D) Use systematic decision making to analyze
behavior and consider the antecedents, consequences, functions, and potential
causes of behavioral difficulties that may impede learning or
socialization.
(E) Promote
intervention acceptability and fidelity during the development, implementation,
and evaluation of mental and behavioral health interventions.
(F) Implement positive behavioral supports
based upon a functional behavioral assessment as indicated at the individual,
group, classroom, school, and district levels that demonstrate the use of
appropriate ecological and behavioral approaches to promote effective student
discipline practices and classroom management with the use of function-based
supports.
(G) Use data to evaluate
implementation and outcomes of mental and behavioral health interventions for
individuals and groups.
(H) Promote
effective home-school collaboration and, when necessary, collaborate with other
community providers to coordinate mental and behavioral health supports and
wraparound services.
(I) Provide
telemental health supports and services for behavioral and mental health, as
trained.
(e) Implement
school-wide practices to promote learning by informing systems development with
use of data, general, and special education programming; and use of
implementation science to establish and sustain evidence-based schoolwide
practices that promote learning, positive behavior, and mental health of all
children and youth from diverse backgrounds and cultures in the context of a
comprehensive framework.
(A) Provide
professional development, training, and ongoing coaching on a range of topics
that promote the use of effective instructional strategies, positive classroom
management practices, positive school climate, and the cultivation of
supportive working relationships.
(B) Design data systems and implement
changes, with the use of outcome data from universal screening procedures and
progress monitoring to identify the need for additional academic or behavioral
support services.
(C) Work
collaboratively with other school personnel to create and maintain a
multi-tiered system of services to support each student's attainment of
academic, social-emotional, and behavioral goals.
(f) Use evidence-based strategies to promote
safe and supportive schools, including multi- tiered prevention and health
promotion related to social-emotional well-being, resilience, and risk factors
in learning, mental, and behavioral health.
(A) Contribute to the implementation and
evaluation of prevention programs that promote physically and psychologically
safe and nonviolent schools and communities.
(B) Participate in school crisis response
teams and collaborate with other professionals to conduct assessments of school
safety.
(g) Facilitate
family and school partnerships and interactions with community agencies to
enhance academic and social-behavioral outcomes for children.
(A) Acknowledge and respect diversity in
family systems, and identify varying world views, cultural, and family
contexts.
(B) Use evidence-based
strategies to design, implement, and evaluate effective policies and practices
that promote family, school, and community partnerships.
(C) Acknowledge barriers to school engagement
and take steps to help families overcome them.
(h) Advocate for and identify equitable
practices for diverse populations, demonstrating knowledge and respect for
knowledge of, and inherent respect for, individual differences, abilities,
disabilities, and other diverse characteristics, including factors related to
child development, religion, culture and cultural identity, race, sexual
orientation, gender identity and expression, socioeconomic status, and other
variables.
(A) Consider the influence of
culture, background, and individual learner characteristics when designing and
implementing interventions to achieve optimal learning and behavioral
outcomes.
(B) Use inclusive
language and provide culturally responsive and equitable practices.
(C) Convey advanced knowledge about special
education and related services, and actively promote specialized instructional
and support practices within special education that meet the diverse needs of
children with disabilities.
(D)
Employ a strengths-based approach to address the diverse learning needs of all
students, including Emerging Multilingual students.
(i) Evaluate, interpret, and synthesize a
cumulative body of research findings and apply these as a foundation for
evidence-based practice and effective service delivery.
(A) Reference evidence-based practices across
tiers of support for social-emotional well-being, positive behavior supports,
and use of effective instructional strategies for academic engagement and
achievement.
(B) Apply knowledge of
evidence-based interventions and programs in the design, implementation, and
evaluation of the fidelity and effectiveness of school-based intervention
plans.
(C) Understand principles of
implementation science and program evaluation and apply these in a variety of
settings.
(j) School
psychologists have knowledge of and provide services consistent with ethical,
legal, and professional standards as aligned with the National Association of
School Psychologists (NASP) and the educator standards found in OAR Division
584-20, STANDARDS FOR COMPETENT AND ETHICAL PERFORMANCE OF OREGON EDUCATORS.
(A) Engage in effective, collaborative, and
ethical professional relationships.
(B) Access, evaluate, and use information
sources and technology in ways that safeguard and enhance the quality of
services, security of confidential information, and responsible record
keeping.
(C) Demonstrate thorough
knowledge and application of state and federal educational law, procedures, and
regulations.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 342.165
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 342.125, ORS 342.136, ORS 342.138, ORS 342.165
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