School psychology: Its educational and societal connections |
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Authors: | Marvin S. Kaplan |
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Affiliation: | Department of Educational Psychology 412 White Hall Kent State University Kent, OH, 44242, USA Department of Educational Psychology 412 White Hall Kent State University Kent, OH 44242, USA |
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Abstract: | School psychology can be viewed either as a pragmatic response to the pressing and immediate needs of the schools ore as an outgrowth of ideological and technological forces in society. This paper argues that beliefs more than needs shaped the history of the profession. School psychology emereged because professional educators held psychological beliefs (and because a psychological testing technology was available to turn those beliefs into practice). Thus, adherence to psychological and developmental principles made age-grading and appropriate response to the sudden influx of large numbers of new students into the schools, and the acceptance of child-centered educational theories led logically to the study of individual children's needs, especially of those who were atypical. Both educators and psychologists subscribed, at least in principle, to the mainstream social ideology of individualism. School psychology became a means for translating such national values (e.g., individualism) and educational principles (e.g., individualized instruction) into school practice. |
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