“Being an Educational Psychologist is an endless pursuit in trying to affect positive change in children’s lives. There is always more that can be done. But what is certain, is that we must always try our best for each and every child.”

 
RISE and Recovery
Back to School, COVID-19, Resiliency Lee Randall Back to School, COVID-19, Resiliency Lee Randall

RISE and Recovery

I think it is safe to say that 2020 has not turned out like we all would have predicted. The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted on the lives of everyone across the world and the uncertainty and changes it has imposed upon our societies continue to be felt throughout the globe. If there is one psychological factor that I think has helped people to cope with and come through the crisis, it would have to be resilience.

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Dynamic Assessment: A Journey
CPD, Educational Psychology Richard Skelton CPD, Educational Psychology Richard Skelton

Dynamic Assessment: A Journey

Why Dynamic Assessment? This blog aims to give a flavour of my DA ‘journey’ and to reflect on why is has been an important part of my practice for nearly ten years.

Reflecting back to those first impressions, and forward to where I am now, what is it about DA that has made it a frequent and consistent aspect of my practice for almost 10 years? One of the most striking elements is that I now have a language to talk about cognition that doesn’t have to involve scores, or is based on a theory of fixed abilities that has limited reliability and validity for many of the children and young people with whom I work…

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RISE 3: Resilience In Schools and Education
Resiliency, COVID-19, Back to School Lee Randall Resiliency, COVID-19, Back to School Lee Randall

RISE 3: Resilience In Schools and Education

The development of the RISE programme

The Resiliency in Schools and Education (RISE) programme is an evidence-based programme, grounded in resiliency research. We created this to give schools and teachers the tools they will need to best support build up children’s resiliency. While the principals and strategies are especially timely as children return to school following extended periods away, we also know that building children’s resiliency is always an important endeavour to protect and improve wellbeing, and to enable children to flourish and thrive.

The RISE programme is an intensive teacher course based upon eight well-established and fundamental pillars of resiliency which collectively encompass all of children’s important resiliency capacity…

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RISE 2: Resilience in Schools and Education
Resiliency, COVID-19, Back to School Lee Randall Resiliency, COVID-19, Back to School Lee Randall

RISE 2: Resilience in Schools and Education

The Importance of Resiliency

Resiliency refers to the capacity of an individual to cope with, adapt and respond to challenge, difficulty and adversity. It is not the absence or avoidance of distress or hardship, rather, resilience is the ability to confidently face challenges, adapt and even grow as a result of these.

The research literature (consisting of over 4,000 journal articles, and hundreds of relevant books at the time of writing), demonstrates that resiliency is one of the most significant factors in determining progress, success and wellbeing of children in their education, with resilient children better equipped to (amongst other things) overcome setbacks, form positive social relationships and develop personal and academic independence.

If we wish to develop resiliency in our children, it would be prudent initially to think about the differences between those able to show resiliency, and those who struggle to do so…

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RISE 1: Resilience In Schools and Education
Resiliency, COVID-19, Back to School Lee Randall Resiliency, COVID-19, Back to School Lee Randall

RISE 1: Resilience In Schools and Education

Education in a time of COVID-19

The COVID-19 pandemic has been a testing time for us all and it has taken a lot of effort for even those of us fortunate enough to have suffered no significant hardship, to come to terms with ‘the new normal’. As the lockdown begins to ease, thoughts are beginning to turn to what happens next; namely when and how we can safely get our children settled back into education. Children will need to be more courageous, resourceful, robust and independent than ever before to thrive after the challenges the coronavirus pandemic has posed and will continue to pose.

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Dynamic Assessment
Educational Psychology, CPD Richard Skelton Educational Psychology, CPD Richard Skelton

Dynamic Assessment

As an Educational Psychologist (EP), we’re often asked to complete standardised tests on areas of children’s cognition, curriculum development, neuropsychological functioning etc. I was introduced to Dynamic Assessment (DA) when I started my doctoral training in 2009. I had been wrestling with my view of more formal standardised cognitive assessments since starting as an assistant educational psychologist and the idea of focusing on what a child is capable of achieving when given a level of mediation really appealed to me.

Dynamic assessment is based on Vygotskian principles and an important aspect of this is the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD). This highlights the social aspects of learning by recognising the role of others in relation to a learning journey of a child. DA emphasises the importance of having a teaching and mediation element. By placing a learning phase within the assessment, it gives us an idea of the child’s true learning potential, what it takes by way of our mediation to help that child move forward and where the next steps of learning could be targeted.

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