This is the first of a few tips
written by the assessment team at the
Jerusalem municipality educational psychology services. The members of the team are: Rita Baumgarten, Hanna Brimer,
Nadine Caplan , Eynat Cohen Rahman , Etti Daniel Simon , Uri Dar ,
Michelle Lisses Topaz, Betty Netzer, Ruth Oman Shaked , Adina Sacknovitz
, Smadar Sapir Yogev, Anan Srour
and Dahlia Zayit.
Try
to understand the child's, the family's and the school's story, and define a
specific assessment question.
The referral clarification process and
the interview with the child, the parents and the school staff are psychological
interventions. Asking the questions is
an intervention process. The school
staff, the parents and the child - each have
their own theories about the sources of the child's difficulties. It's important to know these theories and to
integrate them in the overall conceptualization of the "case".
The referral clarification process and the
interview are opportunities to understand the school staff's story about the child, the school system and
the child's place in it. The attempt to
understand the story will in itself create and/or enrich the school's story. As part of the school's story, it's important
to understand, in accordance with the RTI model, the interventions the school has
already attempted with the child and their results.
The referral clarification process and the
interview are opportunities to understand and to think with the parents about their
story of the child, his developmental history and their family history, their
family system and the child's place in it.
These are opportunities to understand and to think with the child about his
story of himself, the way he sees the school and the family systems and his
place in them. These are also
opportunities to gather information from other sources (medical, paramedical)
and to see if the child has visual or auditory sensory disabilities.
If, after the referral clarification process and the
interviews, you've decided with the family, the
child and the school staff that the best intervention would be psychological
assessment, try to define the assessment question or questions with the child,
the family and the school staff. Try to formulate
a clear, specific
question or clear, specific questions. Such
questions will help you focus the assessment
process and plan it so that it will result in answers to these questions. Try to avoid working automatically, with a
standard test battery. Ask yourself:
what will be surprising for me to find out?
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