History
of school
psychology at the University of Minnesota
School psychology in the state of Minnesota has a long
history, going back as far as 1925, when the Minneapolis
Public Schools first employed psychologists. However, the
training of psychologists to work specifically in school
settings did not coalesce until the mid-1950s when two
forces converged at the University of Minnesota: the
national movement to promote psychology's role in education and the broad base of
support for school psychology that has existed historically
in Minnesota.
Dale Harris of the University of Minnesota's Institute of
Child Welfare (now the Institute of Child Development)
helped plan the American Psychological Association's Thayer
Conference on School Psychology, which Harris, Maynard
Reynolds, and Dean Walter William Cook of the College of
Education attended in 1954. Interest in school psychology on
the part of the University continued to be strong. Within
the next two years, school psychology workshops and
courses appeared in the University's summer school program
under the joint sponsorship of the Institute of Child
Welfare, the College of Education, and the Department of
Psychology.
The cooperation among the Department of Educational
Psychology, the Institute of Child Development, and the
Department of Psychology has taken the unique form of
offering degrees to school psychology students from any one
of the three departments for which the student qualified
upon admission. This interdepartmental cooperation has been
a particular strength at Minnesota because of the diverse
faculty resources it provides for students.
In 1961, a two-year graduate program leading to a
professional certificateeducational specialist in
school psychological serviceswas instituted. In 1963, the
first doctoral degree was awarded in school psychology. The
Minnesota program was among the first school psychology
programs to receive accreditation from the American
Psychological Association (APA). Besides continual
accreditation since then, an additional tribute to the
strength of the program was student support provided by the
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), from 1958 to
1992.
In 1978 the National School Psychology Inservice Training
Network began activities under the auspices of the school
psychology program. Through this six-year endeavor, funded
by the U.S. Office of Special Education, Minnesota students
and faculty played a decisive role in providing extensive
inservice training to practicing school psychologists
throughout the nation in the development of training
materials and in bringing about new thinking about the
future of the profession. In 1980, the network, in
collaboration with the APA and the National Association of
School Psychologists (NASP), sponsored the Minnesota-based
Spring Hill Symposium on the Future of School Psychology,
the first comprehensive examination of school psychology by
school psychologists since the 1954 Thayer Conference. In 2002, specific
goals for the future training and practice of school psychology occurred at
The Future of School Psychology Invitational Conference where Dr.
Christenson was on the of the keynote speakers.
The school psychology program maintains a strong
tradition of student involvement in faculty research across
the spectrum of the Department of Educational Psychology,
the Institute of Child Development, and the Department of
Psychology. Drawing on a unique array of interdepartmental
faculty resources, students are prepared to become competent
scientist practitioners who can apply basic research to the
very real lives of children and the adults who care for
them. The variety of research projects and theoretical
perspectives provided by this interdepartmental structure
permits maximal flexibility for the individual student.
In 1987, the faculty engaged in an intensive study of the
program's focus and curriculum. That study resulted in the
completion of a set of recommendations for restructuring the
program and naming a new core faculty to better address the
domains of knowledge and practice in contemporary school
psychology with a consistent focus on the current needs of
the schools. The core faculty represents the Department of
Educational Psychology and related departments who have
strong preparation, experience, and current commitments in
research, teaching, and professional service related to the
practice of school psychology. The faculty are committed to
translating theory and research findings into practice to
address psychological concerns in educational contexts for
children and youth. The activities and competencies
specified in the document entitled School Psychology: A
Blueprint for the Future of Training and Practice was
adopted as a model for the program. The document was a
product of activities of the National School Psychology
Inservice Training Network which was housed at the
University of Minnesota from 1978-1984. For over a decade, the S.C. and Ph.D. programs have been NASP
certified. Since 1998, School Psychology: A Blueprint for
Training and Practice II, which specifies 10 domains of
school psychology leadership and function in the schools,
has been used as a model for training. We have also added training in
supervision and technology.
The school psychology program has produced over 340 Ph.D.
and M.A./Specialist (S.C.) graduates since 1963, providing
leadership in universities, school systems, and mental
health facilities throughout the nation. The student who
pursues the field of school psychology at Minnesota will
become part of a rich tradition of cross-departmental
preparation for serving as a scientist practitioner within
the profession. Such opportunities allow for breadth and
depth of study in school psychology with the integration of
many specialty areas in psychology, education, and child
development
Article based in part on Lindborg,
S., & Egeland, B. (1987). "Psychology in the
Schools Training Programs at the University of
Minnesota." Professional School Psychology, 2(1),
67-74.
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