Abstract
As we enter the 21st Century, school psychologists are in a key position to participate in comprehensive health care of children and adolescents. For the most part, however, school psychologists have persisted in the conduct of traditional psychoeducational assessment as a primary function. Presented here is a model for thinking about school psychology in which practitioners assume an active role in addressing the health and mental health needs of children and adolescents. Comprehensive health care is defined as an integrated system of culture-specific services ranging from prevention to treatment directed toward health, mental health, and related needs of students and their families. The model is rooted in developmental-ecological theory and action research methodology and embodies a participatory approach in which caregivers, stakeholders, and professionals work together to design, implement, and evaluate interventions. Realizing a role in health care requires changes in the conceptual framework and professional identity characterizing school psychology.
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Notes on contributors
Bonnie K. Nastasi
Bonnie K. Nastasi, PhD, is Associate Director of Interventions at The Institute for Community Research in Hartford, Connecticut, and formerly Director and Associate Professor of School Psychology at University at Albany, State University of New York. She has conducted applied research in the U.S. and Sri Lanka. Her interests include mental health promotion, risk-behavior prevention, use of qualitative research methods in school psychology, and promoting school psychology internationally. She is currently directing a 4–1/2-year intervention research project entitled, Building preventive group norms in urban middle schools, in the New Haven, Connecticut, Public Schools. The project is funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health (Jean Schensul, Principal Investigator; Bonnie Nastasi, Co-Principal Investigator).