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About this book
This unique guidebook is specifically designed with useful multicultural applications aimed at practice-based school psychology. The text compiles an informational and instructional array of helpful "hands-on" checklists, reviews of some of the most current cultural literature applicable to best practices, and provides guided steps to take in various practice-based situations. Multicultural School Psychology Competencies: A Practical Guide is practice-based, culture-sensitive, and intended for the multicultural competency preparation of psychologists-in-training and in practice as well as other professionals working with diverse children and youth in schools and other educational settings.
Key Features Â
Key Features Â
- Presents critical multicultural competencies that are practice and situation-based to offer guidance on what to do in specific school, clinical, or other educational settings
- Includes checklists and scales that give readers access to practical situation guidelines and accessibility of copying scales
- Provides guidelines for writing psychological reports for culturally and linguistically diverse children
- Devotes an entire chapter on emotional and multiple intelligence
- Discusses multicultural clinical assessment in schools
Intended Audience Â
This is an excellent text for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses such as School Psychology Practicum, Clinical Practicum, Role of the School Psychologist, and Multicultural or Bilingual Assessment-Behavioral in the fields of psychology, counseling, and education. This handy, comprehensive volume is also an invaluable resource for school psychologists, school counselors, educators, and other practitioners.
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Information
PART I
Multicultural School Competencies

1
Introduction to Multicultural School Competencies

Developing Multicultural Competencies
Perhaps the fact that it is no longer necessary to explain why multiculturalism is an important concept in psychology and education demonstrates its lengthy and dusty trail to success. It is evident that the study of culture is not a novel idea. In the professions of counseling psychology, mental health, and education, culture and its relationship to sound practice in these fields have been studied for decades. School counseling services have been in effect since the mid-1960s and the need for multicultural competent counselors was recognized even then. Some fifteen years later, a position paper from the Education and Training Committee of the American Psychological Associationâs (APA) Division 17 (Counseling Psychology) produced various definitions of multiculturalism (Sue, Bernier, et al., 1982). The 1990s brought about the concept of counselor self-bias and the recognition that self-bias was a basic constituent of efficacious counseling. A larger concern is that psychology has been described as âEurocentricâ due to its historical and educational development. Multiculturalism in psychological practice has not been adopted easily within the teaching establishment.
Many researchers and practitioners have stressed the need for cross-cultural training (Canino & Spurlock, 2000; Gopaul-McNicol & Brice-Baker, 1998; Sue, Arrendondo, & McDavis, 1992; Plummer, 1998). Until recently, with the exception of a few researchers, school psychology was not as productive as it might have been in this cross-cultural undertaking and appears to have initiated a drive to âcatch upâ within the last decade or so, with numerous publications focusing on culture-based suggestions and guidelines (Ingraham & Meyers, 2000; Rogers et al., 1999; Rogers, 2000; Sheridan, 2000; Martens, 1993). It is now deemed vital for school psychologists to adhere to âculturally sensitiveâ ethnical and professional responsibilities. Recommendations have been made for school psychologists to service racial/ethnic and culturally and linguistically diverse (CLD) children and their families based on the American Psychological Associationâs (APA) Division 16 Taskforce on Cross-Cultural School Psychology Competencies and by guidelines established by APAâs Division 17 for multicultural counseling proficiency for psychologists in the year 2000 (Rogers et al., 1999).
Most importantly, a recognized major challenge for the field of school psychology is the ethnic minority underrepresentation among the ranks of CLD school psychologists (Merrell, Ervin, & Gimpel, 2006). In order to meet the needs of the youths serviced in schools, changes in the field are recommended that will bring about an increase in the number of ethnic CLD school psychologists. One suggested way of tackling this issue is to ensure efforts are made to recruit and retain CLD school psychologists at all levels, from practitioners to administrators, as well as university trainers (Merrell et al., 2006; Sheridan & Gutkin, 2000). The National Association of School Psychologists (NASP) also considers an increase in the proportion of CLD school psychologists to be pivotal to the profession of school psychology in order to progress cultural and linguistic services in schools (Merrell et al., 2006). A positive response to this need will enhance the practices that are already in place in schools regarding culturally responsive service delivery (Curtis, Hunley, Walker, & Baker, 1999).
Racial/ethnic identity development, acculturation, and cultural psychology are major constructs that demonstrate how the profession has advanced in the last few decades. These constructs have been identified as differentially applicable to the diversity of the various racial and ethnic groups in the United States. The research on acculturation and racial/ethnic identity views the acculturative and racial/ethnic identity process as different for each racial/ethnic person (see Carter, 2005; Helms, 1994; Phinney, 1996; Sodowsky & Maestas, 2000). As a result of these distinctions, it is important for school psychologists to be aware that there are individual differences within racial/ethnic groups and that similar groups can be culturally and linguistically diverse.
As underscored in the various chapters of this book, school psychologists working with diverse groups of children in the United States will encounter children who are recently arrived, first-generation immigrants, and second- or third-generation settlers. Consequently, each child will have a specific family, educational, and language history. Some racial/ethnic and culturally and linguistically diverse groups in the United States have been citizens for centuries, while others have been here for only decades. In addition, it is important to note that the commonly used term âminority groupâ is associated with those individuals from lower socioeconomic status, education, and political power. This term is used interchangeably with various racial/ethnic groups which, because of their physical or cultural background, have been marked by the dominant culture/society as undesirable, and thus have been treated unjustly. Accordingly, Native Americans (including American Indians, Eskimos, and Aleuts), African Americans, Latino Americans, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are considered minority groups, as well as other racial/ethnic groups which have at some time immigrated to the United States and experienced unfair treatment.
In the multicultural literature, the term âethnicityâ is used to refer to a specific group of people who have the same social and cultural beliefs. Contrary to common belief, race is not a biological category that divides and labels different groups as a result of distinctive innate biological traits (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2001). However, race has also been defined as having both biological and hereditary components (Ponterotto & Casas, 1991). The following explanation aids to clarify further the issue of race as a biological grouping:
The visible physical traits associated with race, such as hair and skin color, are defined by a tiny fraction of our genes, and they do not reliably differentiate between the social categories of race. As more is learned about the 30,000 genes of the human genome, variations between groups are being identified, such as in genes that code for the enzymes active in drug metabolism. While such information may prove to have clinical utility, it is important to note that these variations cannot be used to distinguish groups from one another as they are outweighed by overwhelming genetic similarities across so-called racial groups. (Paabo, 2001, cited in U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2001, p. 7)
It is helpful to remember that the genetic analysis of different ethnic groups has resulted in compelling evidence that there are greater genetic variations within than there are across racial groups (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2001). With reference to culture, Helms and Tallyrand (1997) explain culture as ârace, ethnic, cultural and socioeconomic conditions of socializations.â Different cultures âclassify people into racial groups according to a set of characteristics that are socially significantâ (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2001, p. 9).
In actual practice, the knowledge of these different terms assists the practitioner to better understand important variables that must be considered when servicing children from racially, ethnically, culturally, and linguistically diverse backgrounds, whether settled in the United States for a decade or for a century or more. Hence the term âculturally and linguistically diverse,â or CLD, can encompass children from various racial, ethnic, and cultural groups, all of whom may speak different native languages and/or may have acquired bilingual proficiency or remained monolingual. For the purposes of this guidebook, the term CLD is employed to identify children and youth from all racial/ethnic, culturally, and linguistically diverse groups in the United States. From this perspective, the term should therefore prompt school psychologists to be alert to the racial and ethnic identity, cultural history, and language acquisition of the particular students they service.
With these cultural perspectives and responsibilities in view, this guidebook is a compilation of straightforward references to some of the most compelling multicultural issues (and practice-based techniques) in school psychology practice. It is addressed to the questioning practitioner, the student in training, the university trainer, and other education and mental health professionals. The intent for school practitioners is to augment their awareness and knowledge of what is currently obligatory for culturally ethical and professional practice in schools. Subsequent chapters will address the majority of the multicultural issues noted in depth here. The ensuing review of multicultural issues and competencies is provided as groundwork for the more extensive discussions in the rest of this book. Suggested readings are listed at the end of each chapter in annotated bibliographies. Where feasible, checklists and instruments have been reproduced and/or information for obtaining them has been included in the reference sections. Lastly, an additional special ambition of this guidebook is to act as a proactive vehicle for increasing the numbers of racial/ethnic CLD school psychologists in our schools.
Brief Historical Review of Multiculturalism
This concise review of critical multicultural issues is aimed at increasing school psychologistsâ historical awareness of the âmulticultural movementâ in education and psychology, as well as providing a foundation for multicultural school psychology competencies.
Definition of Multiculturalism
Over the last few decades, various researchers have defined multicultural competency (Atkinson, Morton, & Sue, 1998; Pedersen, 1987, 1985; Sue et al., 1992; Sue et al., 1999; Sue, 1998). Recently, Sue and colleagues (1999) defined multiculturalism as including a broad melange of differences among people that ultimately tends to hinder communication and comprehension. These differences are: race, gender, sexual orientation, competence, incapacity, religion, and rank. To these we can add: age, language, ethnic educational/vocational viewpoints, disciplinary norms, ethnic-perceived normal and abnormal behaviors, family constellation, and extended family members. Reynolds (2000) gives another definition: âMulticulturalism is about understanding ourselves and others who are different from us ⌠at its core [it is] about people and relationships. And all relationships are about discovering our commonalities, our cultural differences, and our personal uniquenessâ (p. 111).
These definitions can be applied to both sociological and psychological contexts, and serve as a stepping stone toward the understanding and recognition of various cultural groups. For school psychologists, multiculturalism is now a professional quest leading to more advanced standards and competencies for best practice.
Multicultural Education
Another important issue that is automatically connected to multiculturalism is education. Educators began using the expression âmulticultural educationâ in the 1970s. Marshall (2002) defines multicultural education as âa vision of schooling based on the democratic ideas of justice and equality.â Marshall points out that scholars from Canada, England, France, Australia, and South Africa are studying what multicultural education means for the teaching-learning process. In the United States, scholars studying multicultural education agree that traditional schooling is a thing of the past, advocating restructuring within the areas of teaching styles, techniques, curriculum, and interpersonal interactions (Marshall, 2002).
As the ethnic composition of the United States continued to diversify, the prospect that more educators needed to work with diverse student populations quickly became a reality in the classroom. To date, researchers have observed a continuing need for multicultural educators in the United States (Banks, 2002; Kim & Atkinson, 2002; Kim, Yang, Atkinson, Wolfe, & Hong, 2001; Ladson-Billings, 2001; Ramos-Sanchez, Atkinson, & Fraga, 1999; Sue et al., 1999). Multicultural education is now assumed to be an essential component of an educatorâs repertoire (Banks, 2002; Gollnick & Chinn, 2006; Ladson-Billings, 2001). Some university training programs have incorporated multicultural education courses in their curricula. Furthermore, numerous texts have been published on multicultural instructional strategies for teachers that serve to increase teachersâ cultural awareness, their culturally sensitive knowledge, and the development of adequate skills for servicing diverse ethnic groups. Additionally, knowledge of teaching strategies for racial/ethnic CLD students is considered an integral part of teachersâ necessary skills as a result of multicultural education advocacy and the influx of literature available in this instructional area (Banks, 2002; Nieto, 1999; Gay, 2000). School psychologis...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Dadication
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- PART I: Multicultural School Competencies
- PART II: Multicultural Assessment
- PART III: Consultations and Interventions
- PART IV: Special Topics
- Index
- About the Author
- About the Contributors
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