Stephen P. Kilgus, Carly Oddleifson, Angus Kittelman, D. Rowe
{"title":"Enhancing Support for Student Mental Health in Schools","authors":"Stephen P. Kilgus, Carly Oddleifson, Angus Kittelman, D. Rowe","doi":"10.1177/00400599221147085","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"TE A C H IN G E xc ep ti o na l C hi ld re n, V o l. 55 , N o . 2 , p p . 8 4 –8 7. C o p yr ig ht 2 0 22 T he A ut ho r( s) . D O I: 10 .11 77 /0 0 4 0 0 59 9 22 11 4 70 8 5 This View From the Field column is the fourth and final installment in a series focused on the roles of key stakeholders in the implementation of effective practices for students with or at risk for educational disabilities. In the first column, Rowe and colleagues (2022) highlighted different roles peers have in supporting the implementation of effective practices for students with or at risk for disabilities (e.g., peer networks, peer-assisted learning strategies). In the second column, Garbacz and colleagues (2022) described different validated strategies useful for enhancing parent collaboration in the implementation of effective practices (e.g., relationship building, motivational interviewing, implementation planning). In the third column, Rousey and colleagues (2022) described important roles community stakeholders (e.g., vocational rehabilitation, transition specialists, employers) have in providing effective transition services for students with disabilities. For this column, we emphasize the importance and timeliness in addressing mental health problems facing students in schools and describe how stakeholders (e.g., school and community mental health professionals, parents) are vital in the implementation of effective practices to support students struggling with internalizing and externalizing problems.","PeriodicalId":46909,"journal":{"name":"Teaching Exceptional Children","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2022-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Teaching Exceptional Children","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/00400599221147085","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"EDUCATION, SPECIAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
TE A C H IN G E xc ep ti o na l C hi ld re n, V o l. 55 , N o . 2 , p p . 8 4 –8 7. C o p yr ig ht 2 0 22 T he A ut ho r( s) . D O I: 10 .11 77 /0 0 4 0 0 59 9 22 11 4 70 8 5 This View From the Field column is the fourth and final installment in a series focused on the roles of key stakeholders in the implementation of effective practices for students with or at risk for educational disabilities. In the first column, Rowe and colleagues (2022) highlighted different roles peers have in supporting the implementation of effective practices for students with or at risk for disabilities (e.g., peer networks, peer-assisted learning strategies). In the second column, Garbacz and colleagues (2022) described different validated strategies useful for enhancing parent collaboration in the implementation of effective practices (e.g., relationship building, motivational interviewing, implementation planning). In the third column, Rousey and colleagues (2022) described important roles community stakeholders (e.g., vocational rehabilitation, transition specialists, employers) have in providing effective transition services for students with disabilities. For this column, we emphasize the importance and timeliness in addressing mental health problems facing students in schools and describe how stakeholders (e.g., school and community mental health professionals, parents) are vital in the implementation of effective practices to support students struggling with internalizing and externalizing problems.
A . C . H . G . C . H . G . C . C . H . G . C . C . H . G . C . C . H . G . C . C . C . H . G . C . C . C . H . G . C . C . C . H . G . C。2、p、p。8 4 -8 7。你可以把你的眼睛从22岁的眼睛移到22岁的眼睛上。D O I: 10.11 77 /0 0 4 0 0 59 9 22 11 4 70 8 5这篇来自实地的观点专栏是一个系列的第四部分,也是最后一部分,该系列的重点是主要利益攸关方在为有教育障碍或有教育障碍风险的学生实施有效做法方面的作用。在第一篇专栏文章中,Rowe和他的同事(2022)强调了同伴在支持为有残疾或有残疾风险的学生实施有效实践(例如,同伴网络,同伴辅助学习策略)方面所扮演的不同角色。在第二专栏中,Garbacz及其同事(2022)描述了不同的有效策略,这些策略有助于在实施有效实践时加强父母的合作(例如,建立关系、动机性访谈、实施计划)。在第三栏中,Rousey及其同事(2022)描述了社区利益相关者(如职业康复、过渡专家、雇主)在为残疾学生提供有效的过渡服务方面所扮演的重要角色。在本专栏中,我们强调了解决学校学生面临的心理健康问题的重要性和及时性,并描述了利益相关者(例如,学校和社区心理健康专业人员,家长)在实施有效实践以支持与内在化和外在化问题作斗争的学生方面是如何至关重要的。