Frey Andy J, Mitchell Brandon D, Kelly Michael S, McNally Shawn, Tillett Kathryn
University of Missouri, School of Social Work, Columbia, MO 65211 USA.
Kent School of Social Work, University of Louisville, Patterson Hall, Louisville, KY 40292, USA.
School Ment Health. 2022;14(4):789-801. doi: 10.1007/s12310-022-09530-5. Epub 2022 Oct 13.
School-based mental health practitioners can offer enhanced support to schools and students; yet their training, roles, and expertise vary. The roles of these professionals are often conflated, misunderstood, or marginalized in their utility throughout the school system. The purpose of this manuscript is to enhance the capacity of educational leaders to make informed hiring, contracting, and role assignment decisions that best fit school and student needs regarding school mental health services. We clarify the landscape of two distinct groups of qualified school mental health professionals-those who are and those who are ; each group represents professionals from multiple disciplines. We illuminate similarities and differences of these professionals and juxtapose the utility of traditional mental health versus school-based mental health. We then discuss the similarities and differences of qualified school mental health professionals described within the context of traditional and school-based mental health preparation and service delivery. We conclude by contributing three resources for educational leaders to support the process of engaging school-based mental health practitioners. First, we offer a planning guide to understand state variations in certification requirements across professionals. Second, we provide a hiring guide primer that summarizes education requirements and delineates role orientations for school mental health practitioners. Third, we provide an interview guide to help clarify a candidate's experience and skills useful to contemporary school needs. We conclude by offering recommendations for educational leaders to become more effective consumers of school-based mental health services.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12310-022-09530-5.
以学校为基础的心理健康从业者可以为学校和学生提供更多支持;然而,他们的培训、角色和专业知识各不相同。这些专业人员的角色在整个学校系统中常常被混淆、误解或边缘化。本文的目的是提高教育领导者做出明智的招聘、签约和角色分配决策的能力,这些决策最符合学校和学生在学校心理健康服务方面的需求。我们阐明了两类不同的合格学校心理健康专业人员的情况——一类是[具体类别1],另一类是[具体类别2];每一类都代表了来自多个学科的专业人员。我们阐述了这些专业人员的异同,并将传统心理健康与以学校为基础的心理健康的效用进行了对比。然后,我们讨论了在传统和以学校为基础的心理健康准备及服务提供背景下所描述的合格学校心理健康专业人员的异同。我们通过为教育领导者提供三种资源来支持聘用以学校为基础的心理健康从业者的过程作为结论。首先,我们提供一份规划指南,以了解不同专业人员认证要求的州际差异。其次,我们提供一份招聘指南入门手册,总结教育要求并描述学校心理健康从业者的角色定位。第三,我们提供一份面试指南,以帮助明确候选人对当代学校需求有用的经验和技能。我们最后为教育领导者提供建议,使其成为更有效的以学校为基础的心理健康服务消费者。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s12310-022-09530-5获取的补充材料。