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Pfeiffer, Steven I. – Communique, 2022
The novel coronavirus has created a challenging, difficult, and chronic period of unhealthy stress for everyone associated with today's schools: teachers, parents, students, counselors, and administrators alike, both in the United States and globally. This article offers psychologists in the schools a resource for information on what to consider…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Mental Health, Community Health Services
Sullivan, Amanda L.; Weeks, Mollie; Kulkarni, Tara; Nguyen, Thuy; Kendrick-Dunn, Tiombe Bisa; Barrett, Charles – Communique, 2020
As noted in Part 1 of the National Association of School Psychologists (NASP) Social Justice Committee's (SJC) series on health disparities, more than a century of scholarship has documented differential health outcomes among minoritized groups in the United States (Proctor et al., 2020). Most recently, the COVID-19 pandemic has underscored the…
Descriptors: Health Services, Racial Discrimination, Racial Bias, School Psychologists
Hart, Shelley R. – Communique, 2021
This article serves as the first in a series addressing comprehensive suicide prevention programming in the school context. Suicide is currently the second leading cause of death for 10- to 24-year-olds in the United States. As schools are a place where the majority of youth spend a significant amount of time, it follows that they are a natural…
Descriptors: Suicide, Prevention, School Health Services, Mental Health
Skalski, Anastasia Kalamaros; Strobach, Kelly Vaillancourt; Rossen, Eric; Cowan, Katherine C. – Communique, 2015
Recently, the National Association of School Psychologists (NASP) has developed and approved several documents and resources that support foundational policy and practice areas critical to the future of school psychology: (1) effective education systems; (2) comprehensive school mental and behavioral health services; and (3) the comprehensive role…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Role, School Psychology, Mental Health
Fernandez, Ivelisse Torres – Communique, 2015
In the southwestern United States, there is a group of children who are referred to as "borderland children" who experience additional challenges that place them at higher risk of developing mental health and other related problems. For the purpose of this article, borderland children are defined as children who reside in towns and…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Mental Health, Health Services, Immigration