Or. Admin. Code § 584-435-0200 - School Psychologist License: Program Standards
(1) Purpose of the Program: To prepare
candidates for the School Psychologist License. Program completers must
demonstrate the knowledge, skills, professional dispositions, and cultural
competencies necessary to promote the academic, career, personal, and social
development of pre-kindergarten to grade 12 students.
Note: The standards below have been taken from the Professional Standards of the National Association of School Psychologists, 2020 edition.
(2) Candidate
Requirements:
(a) Obtain a master's or higher
degree in counseling, education, or related behavior sciences from an Approved
institution in the United States, or the foreign equivalent of such degree
approved by the Commission and a bachelor's degree. A master's degree or a
doctoral degree from an Approved institution in the United States validates a
nonaccredited bachelor's degree. Candidates must submit official transcripts
showing degree conferral; or
(b)
Complete a Commission-approved specialist-level program or equivalent of study
in school psychology (e.g., EdS, SSP, CAS, CAGS, PsyS) consisting of the
following:
(A) A minimum of 3 years of
full-time student at the graduate level, or the equivalent inclusive of
structured field experiences;
(B)
At least 60 graduate semester hours or the equivalent, with at least 54 hours
exclusive of credit for the supervised specialist-level internship experience;
and
(C) A supervised internship
experience taken for academic credit with a minimum of 1,200 clock hours,
including a minimum of 600 hours in a school setting and completed across 1
academic year on a full-time basis or 2 consecutive academic years on a
half-time basis.
(3) Standard 1: Data-based Decision Making.
School psychologists understand and utilize assessment methods for identifying
strengths and needs; developing effective interventions, services, and
programs; and measuring progress and outcomes within a multi-tiered system of
supports. School psychologists use a problem-solving framework as the basis for
all professional activities. School psychologists systematically collect data
from multiple sources as a foundation for decision-making at the individual,
group, and systems levels, and they consider ecological factors (e.g.,
classroom, family, and community characteristics) as a context for assessment
and intervention.
(4) Standard 2:
Consultation and Collaboration. School psychologists understand varied models
and strategies of consultation and collaboration applicable to individuals,
families, groups, and systems, as well as methods to promote effective
implementation of services. As part of a systematic and comprehensive process
of effective decision making and problem solving that permeates all aspects of
service delivery, school psychologists demonstrate skills to consult,
collaborate, and communicate effectively with others.
(5) Standard 3: Academic Interventions and
Instructional Supports. School psychologists understand the biological,
cultural, and social influences on academic skills; human learning, cognitive,
and developmental processes; and evidence-based curricula and instructional
strategies. School psychologists, in collaboration with others, use assessment
and data collection methods to implement and evaluate services that support
academic skill development in children.
(6) Standard 4: Mental and Behavioral Health
Services and Interventions. School psychologists understand the biological,
cultural, developmental, and social influences on mental and behavioral health,
behavioral and emotional impacts on learning, and evidence-based strategies to
promote social-emotional functioning. School psychologists, in collaboration
with others, design, implement, and evaluate services that promote resilience
and positive behavior, support socialization and adaptive skills, and enhance
mental and behavioral health.
(7)
Standard 5: School-Wide Practices to Promote Learning. School psychologists
understand systems structures, organization, and theory; general and special
education programming; implementation science; and evidence-based, school-wide
practices that promote learning, positive behavior, and mental health. School
psychologists, in collaboration with others, develop and implement practices
and strategies to create and maintain safe, effective, and supportive learning
environments for students and school staff.
(8) Standard 6: Services to Promote Safe and
Supportive Schools. School psychologists understand principles and research
related to social-emotional well-being, resilience and risk factors in
learning, mental and behavioral health, services in schools and communities to
support multi-tiered prevention and health promotion, and evidence-based
strategies for creating safe and supportive schools. School psychologists, in
collaboration with others, promote preventive and responsive services that
enhance learning, mental and behavioral health, and psychological and physical
safety and implement effective crisis prevention, protection, mitigation,
response, and recovery.
(9)
Standard 7: Family, School, and Community Collaboration. School psychologists
understand principles and research related to family systems, strengths, needs,
and cultures; evidence-based strategies to support positive family influences
on children's learning and mental health; and strategies to develop
collaboration between families and schools. School psychologists, in
collaboration with others, design, implement, and evaluate services that
respond to culture and context. They facilitate family and school partnerships
and interactions with community agencies to enhance academic and
social-behavioral outcomes for children.
(10) Standard 8: Equitable Practices for
Diverse Student Populations. School psychologists have knowledge of individual
differences, abilities, disabilities, and other diverse characteristics and the
impact they have on development and learning. They also understand principles
and research related to diversity in children, families, schools, and
communities, including factors related to child development, religion, culture
and cultural identity, race, sexual orientation, gender identity and
expression, socioeconomic status, and other variables. School psychologists
implement evidence-based strategies to enhance services in both general and
special education and address potential influences related to diversity. School
psychologists demonstrate skills to provide professional services that promote
effective functioning for individuals, families, and schools with diverse
characteristics, cultures, and backgrounds through an ecological lens across
multiple contexts. School psychologists recognize that equitable practices for
diverse student populations, respect for diversity in development and learning,
and advocacy for social justice are foundational to effective service delivery.
While equality ensures that all children have the same access to general and
special educational opportunities, equity ensures that each student receives
what they need to benefit from these opportunities.
(11) Standard 9: Research and Evidence-Based
Practice. School psychologists have knowledge of research design, statistics,
measurement, and varied data collection and analysis techniques sufficient for
understanding research, interpreting data, and evaluating programs in applied
settings. As scientist practitioners, school psychologists evaluate and apply
research as a foundation for service delivery and, in collaboration with
others, use various techniques and technology resources for data collection,
measurement, and analysis to support effective practices at the individual,
group, and/or systems levels.
(12)
Standard 10: Legal, Ethical, and Professional Practice. School psychologists
have knowledge of the history and foundations of school psychology; multiple
service models and methods; ethical, legal, and professional standards; and
other factors related to professional identity and effective practice as school
psychologists. School psychologists provide services consistent with ethical,
legal, and professional standards; engage in responsive ethical and
professional decision-making; collaborate with other professionals; and apply
professional work characteristics needed for effective practice as school
psychologists, including effective interpersonal skills, responsibility,
adaptability, initiative, dependability, technological competence, advocacy
skills, respect for human diversity, and a commitment to social justice and
equity.
(13) Standard 11:
Supervised Field Experiences in School Psychology. The program assures that all
candidates complete the following practica and internship experiences:
(a) Practicum Experience. The school
psychology program requires supervised practica based on program goals and NASP
Graduate Preparation Standards.
(A) At a
minimum, activities must include opportunities to build professional
competencies in
(i) Data-based decision
making, including psychoeducational assessment with recommendations;
(ii) The design, implementation, and
evaluation of services that support cognitive and academic skills;
and
(iii) The design,
implementation, and evaluation of services that support socialization,
behavioral and mental health, and emotional well-being (e.g., counseling,
behavior analysis and intervention, social-emotional learning). The services
can be implemented at the individual, class-wide and/or systems level. Practica
opportunities may include other professional competency development based on
graduate program goals.
(B) The assessment of practicum outcomes must
include a formal evaluation process of all candidates conducted by field
supervisors and/or program faculty. Such assessment is expected to focus on
specific competencies and professional work characteristics and be based on
observations and/or other evaluation methods Practica experiences do not need
to comprehensively address all TSPC program standards. The evaluation criteria
or benchmark is expected to be relevant to the professional developmental stage
of the candidate at the particular level of the practica.
(b) Internship Experience. The school
psychology program includes clinical field experiences that allow candidates to
develop, practice, demonstrate, and reflect upon evidence-based practices in a
graduated manner that increases in complexity.
(A) The clinical experience must be a
comprehensive, supervised, and carefully evaluated internship in school
psychology.
(B) The program must
provide field-based supervision from a school psychologist holding the
appropriate state school psychologist credential for practice in a school
setting (If a portion of the internship is conducted in another setting, there
must be provision of field supervision from a psychologist holding the
appropriate state psychology credential for practice in the internship
setting).
(C) There must be at
least weekly, individual, face-to-face basis field-based supervision with
structured mentoring focused on the intern's attainment of
competencies.
(D) Field-based
internship supervision must additionally meet the following minimum criteria:
an average of at least 2 hours of supervision per full-time week or the
equivalent for part-time placement. Each intern is required to receive
appropriate and regularly scheduled field-supervision.
(E) The supervised internship experience must
be taken for academic credit with a minimum of 1,200 clock hours, including a
minimum of 600 hours in a school setting and completed across one academic year
on a full-time basis or two consecutive academic years on a half-time
basis.
(F) The assessment of
internship outcomes includes formative and summative performance-based
evaluations of interns completed by program faculty and field-based supervisors
that are systematic and comprehensive and ensure that interns attain the
competencies and demonstrate the professional work characteristics needed for
effective practice as early career, independent school psychologists. It is
expected that the intern evaluation covers all TSPC standards of School
Psychology Practice.
(14) The unit assures that candidates for the
School Psychologist License demonstrate knowledge, skills and competencies by
completing preparation in psychological foundations and methods appropriate for
prekindergarten through grade 12 (pre K-12) grade authorization
levels.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 342.147, ORS 342.165
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 342.138, ORS 342.147
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