Introduction Presented at the 2010 National Association of School Psychology Annual Convention Chicago, Illinois References. Methodology/Results Study.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Números.
Advertisements

AGVISE Laboratories %Zone or Grid Samples – Northwood laboratory
Chapter 4 Sampling Distributions and Data Descriptions.
AP STUDY SESSION 2.
Slide 1 Insert your own content. Slide 2 Insert your own content.
Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 1 Computer Systems Organization & Architecture Chapters 8-12 John D. Carpinelli.
STATISTICS INTERVAL ESTIMATION Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Department of Bioenvironmental Systems Engineering National Taiwan University.
STATISTICS Univariate Distributions
Integrating the NASP Practice Model Into Presentations: Resource Slides Referencing the NASP Practice Model in professional development presentations helps.
Variance Estimation in Complex Surveys Third International Conference on Establishment Surveys Montreal, Quebec June 18-21, 2007 Presented by: Kirk Wolter,
UNITED NATIONS Shipment Details Report – January 2006.
1 RA I Sub-Regional Training Seminar on CLIMAT&CLIMAT TEMP Reporting Casablanca, Morocco, 20 – 22 December 2005 Status of observing programmes in RA I.
CALENDAR.
0 - 0.
Overview of Lecture Parametric vs Non-Parametric Statistical Tests.
Lecture 2 ANALYSIS OF VARIANCE: AN INTRODUCTION
1 Session 8 Tests of Hypotheses. 2 By the end of this session, you will be able to set up, conduct and interpret results from a test of hypothesis concerning.
ZMQS ZMQS
STATISTICAL INFERENCE ABOUT MEANS AND PROPORTIONS WITH TWO POPULATIONS
Chapter 7 Sampling and Sampling Distributions
Biostatistics Unit 5 Samples Needs to be completed. 12/24/13.
Break Time Remaining 10:00.
The basics for simulations
Chapter 4: Basic Estimation Techniques
Elementary Statistics
(This presentation may be used for instructional purposes)
PP Test Review Sections 6-1 to 6-6
Chapter 16 Goodness-of-Fit Tests and Contingency Tables
Chi-Square and Analysis of Variance (ANOVA)
Business and Economics 6th Edition
Localisation and speech perception UK National Paediatric Bilateral Audit. Helen Cullington 11 April 2013.
Oil & Gas Final Sample Analysis April 27, Background Information TXU ED provided a list of ESI IDs with SIC codes indicating Oil & Gas (8,583)
Copyright © 2012, Elsevier Inc. All rights Reserved. 1 Chapter 7 Modeling Structure with Blocks.
1 RA III - Regional Training Seminar on CLIMAT&CLIMAT TEMP Reporting Buenos Aires, Argentina, 25 – 27 October 2006 Status of observing programmes in RA.
CHAPTER 2 – DISCRETE DISTRIBUTIONS HÜSEYIN GÜLER MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS Discrete Distributions 1.
2)Do children’s adjustment problems transact over time with parent-teacher communication? Yes. When children showed more externalizing and internalizing.
The Kruskal-Wallis H Test
Opportunities for Prevention & Intervention in Child Maltreatment Investigations Involving Infants in Ontario Barbara Fallon, PhD Assistant Professor Jennifer.
Chapter 15 ANOVA.
Before Between After.
7/16/08 1 New Mexico’s Indicator-based Information System for Public Health Data (NM-IBIS) Community Health Assessment Training July 16, 2008.
Addition 1’s to 20.
Test B, 100 Subtraction Facts
AU 350 SAS 111 Audit Sampling C Delano Gray June 14, 2008.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., Chapter 10 Testing the Difference between Means and Variances.
Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 10 Associations Between Categorical Variables.
Analyzing Genes and Genomes
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chi-Square Tests Chapter 12.
Essential Cell Biology
Chapter Thirteen The One-Way Analysis of Variance.
Chapter 18: The Chi-Square Statistic
Chapter 8 Estimation Understandable Statistics Ninth Edition
ABOUT TWO INDEPENDENT POPULATIONS
Clock will move after 1 minute
PSSA Preparation.
Experimental Design and Analysis of Variance
Essential Cell Biology
1 Chapter 20: Statistical Tests for Ordinal Data.
Shape of the Nation Report: Status of Physical Education in the USA 2006 National Association for Sport and Physical Education (NASPE) American Heart.
Energy Generation in Mitochondria and Chlorplasts
Select a time to count down from the clock above
Murach’s OS/390 and z/OS JCLChapter 16, Slide 1 © 2002, Mike Murach & Associates, Inc.
Patient Survey Results 2013 Nicki Mott. Patient Survey 2013 Patient Survey conducted by IPOS Mori by posting questionnaires to random patients in the.
4/4/2015Slide 1 SOLVING THE PROBLEM A one-sample t-test of a population mean requires that the variable be quantitative. A one-sample test of a population.
1 CAPM Betas The Capital Asset Pricing Model (“CAPM”) [ R s - R f ] = b 0 + b 1 [ R M - R f ] + e People commonly refer to the b 0 in this model as the.
Chapter 13 Comparing Two Populations: Independent Samples.
SPSS Session 5: Association between Nominal Variables Using Chi-Square Statistic.
Chapter 2 The Research Enterprise in Psychology. Table of Contents The Scientific Approach: A Search for Laws Basic assumption: events are governed by.
Chapter 2 The Research Enterprise in Psychology. Table of Contents The Scientific Approach: A Search for Laws Basic assumption: events are governed by.
Presentation transcript:

Introduction Presented at the 2010 National Association of School Psychology Annual Convention Chicago, Illinois References. Methodology/Results Study One The present study examined the average reported scores on the EPPP from Clinical and School Psychology programs across the country. Data was obtained through the Association of State and Provincial Psychology Licensing Boards (ASPPB) which kept data from on program scores. An independent T-test was conducted to analyze difference between clinical and school psychology EPPP scores. Results indicate that Clinical Psychology Programs average approximately 10 points higher (8.636) on the EPPP than do School Psychology graduates. Further analysis revealed that approximately 13% of School Psychology programs had an average failing score on the EPPP during the data collection time period compared to only 4.9% of clinical programs. Study Two The present study examined the contents of the NASP Best Practices in School Psychology V (2007) chapter by chapter and attempted to determine the degree to which they match the areas of content for the EPPP examination. Original ratings of chapters from BP-V (2007) were compiled and then a random sample was drawn from these ratings and re-rated to check for consistency and agreement of ratings. A random sample of 14 (10%) chapters was rerated and then compared against original ratings. The rate of agreement was calculated though frequency distribution and indicated 93.75% of agreement between the second rating and the initial ratings. The chi-square analysis was conducted and indicated that two areas were significantly over represented within Best Practices when compared to EPPP standards: Ethical, Legal, and Professional Issues X 2 (1, N = 141) = 9.42, p.001, and Treatment and Intervention (1, N = 141) = 30.31, p.001. The content areas that were significantly underrepresented in Best Practices were: Biology of Behavior (1, N = 141) = 16.03, p.001, (3) 12%, Cognitive Affective Bases of Behavior (1, N = 141) 7.94, p.001, and Growth and Lifespan Development (1, N= 141) = 15.73, p.001. Conclusions The results of the present study imply that the NASP model regarding training for graduate students of school psychology overemphasizes some of the EPPP areas of competency while underemphasizing others. With the large number of school psychologists who practice outside of the educational setting this represents an increasing difficulty with regards to obtaining licensure. Chi-Squared Analysis of EPPP Standards Area of CompetencyExpected Content Count & (EPPP%) Counts Observed in Best Practices Chi-Square Research Methods17 (6) Biological Basis of Behavior 31 (11)916.03* Social and Multicultural Bases of Behavior 34 (12) Cognitive Affective Bases of Behavior 37 (13)207.94* Growth and Lifespan Development 37 (13) * Assessment and Diagnosis 40 (14) Ethical, Legal, and Professional Issues 43 (15)639.42* Treatment and Interventions 46 (16) * Group Statistics and Independent T-Test Results for Program Differences Program TypeN MeanSD Clinical Psychology School Psychology F = 6.952Sig. =.009 Frequencies of Programs with <140 EPPP Score Program TypeFrequencyPercentage Clinical Psychology % School Psychology 13 13% Doctoral graduates in professional psychology who wish to practice independently are required to successfully pass the Examination for the Professional Practice of Psychology (EPPP) as partial completion of licensure requirements in each of the fifty states. The EPPP is an extensive, 225 item (25 experimental items), multiple-choice examination covering a broad range of topics related to the study and practice of professional psychology. Doctoral programs in professional psychology are designed to help prepare students to enter into the field and as part of that to pass the EPPP. At the present time, it is estimated that 83% of candidates regardless of training background pass the EPPP on their first attempt (DeMers, 2009). Although there are several possible reasons, clinical programs, appear to have a better match between program objectives and test content. Given that two thirds (66.56%; Norcross, Kohout & Wicherski, 2006; Templer, Stroup, Mancuso, Tangen, 2008) of those who take the EPPP are associated with clinical psychology Ph.D. programs, the EPPP questions are weighted toward that particular field. Despite this emphasis on clinical psychology, candidates from other fields of psychology, including school psychology, are required to pass the test in order to engage in independent professional practice (McGaha & Minder, 1993). The presence of a discrepancy between candidate levels of performance may suggest a need to (1) revise the content of the examination to match the training specialization of candidates, or (2) revise the training perspective of school psychology programs so they fit within the EPPP model and its requirements. The present studies demonstrates how well students from the most recent periods compare in performance at the EPPP for school and clinical psychology programs. The second compares the proportion of text devoted in the Best Practices in School Psychology V (BP-V) to the proportion of questions in the eight domains assessed by the EPPP to determine whether BP-V as an interpretation of the Blueprint is likely to train students for EPPP. Best Practices V serves as a uniquely critical sample of material to evaluate in school psychology curriculum for the following reasons. First, it has a noted historical and prominent role in the development and training of school psychologists (Fagan & Wise, 2007). Second, it is intended by its editors to act as an implementation of the NASP training model outlined in the Blueprint III (Harrison & Prus, 2008). References DeMers, S. (2009). Understanding the purpose, strengths, and limitations of the EPPP: A response to Sharpless and Barber. Professional Psychology: research and Practice, 40(4), Fagan, T.K. & Wise, P.S. (2007). School psychology: Past, Present, and Future. National Association of School Psychologists. Bethesda MD. Harrison, P. L., & Prus J. S. (2008). Best Practices in Integrating Best Practices V Content with NASP Standards. In Best Practices in School Psychology V ed. Thomas, A. & Grimes, J. NASP Publications: Bethesda, MD, p. 71 – 102. Norcorss, J. C., Kohout, J. L., & Wicherski, M. (Spring, 2006). Graduate admissions in psychology: II. Acceptance rates and financial considerations, Eye on Psi Chi, 10(3), 20-21, 32). Templer, D., Stroup, K., Mancuso, L, & Tangen, K. (2008). Comparative decline of professional school graduates performance on the examination for professional practice in psychology. Psychological Reports, 102(2), McGaha S., & Minder, C. (1993). Factors influencing performance on the Examination for Professional Practice in Psychology (EPPP), Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 24, 107 – 109.