Wappingers school
psychologist Beth Rizzi
created online resources
to reach students. In the North
Country village of Malone, school
psychologist Chris Van Houten is
consulting more with teachers, making
more classroom visits and making
a point to meet with all students. In
Scarsdale and suburban Gates-Chili,
school psychologists have embraced
telehealth practices to make sure
students have access to services.
Across the state, NYSUT school
psychologists, like their teaching
counterparts, had to create new pathways
to reach students when school
buildings closed and are now gleaning
ways to help students adjust to
being back in school.
Many students have experienced
the upheaval of a world where some
parents lost jobs, family members
died or are experiencing long-term
illness from COVID-19, and social
isolation became necessary to avoid
exposure to the virus. More students
now struggle with anxiety.
As part of NYSUT’s Future Forward
initiative, the union says schools
must prioritize, fund and staff school
psychologists, social workers, counselors,
nurses and school-related
professionals so that social-emotional
supports are available to all
students.
NYSUT recommends three
bills currently before the state
Legislature to make this happen:
One to require schools to
employ at least one full-time
social worker and a licensed
school psychologist, another to
require at least one counselor,
and one to ensure all districts
and BOCES employ at least one
registered professional nurse in each
school building.
This year’s hard-won increase in
state Foundation Aid and federal
American Recovery Plan funding
presents an opportunity to accomplish
these long-overdue goals, said
NYSUT President Andy Pallotta in
recent testimony before the state
Senate Education and Budget
committees.
School psychologists agree.
When school buildings closed,
Rizzi, a member of the Wappingers
Congress of Teachers and president
of the New York Association of School
Psychologists, created a Bitmoji, or
virtual, office stockpiled with links
and resources
on topics
ranging from
meditation to
mindfulness
to support
students.
“We also
created a
check-in
form that
kids could
access online. If they were
experiencing a crisis and
needed to be seen, they
could complete the form
and one of us would reach
out,” she said. Panic attacks,
family discord, fear
about academics, family
illness or suicidal ideation
are just some of the crises
presented.
In this year’s younger
grades, where students
had to begin their school
careers online, “we’re
definitely noticing the socialization
piece. Students
are having difficulty with
peer interaction,” Malone’s
Van Houten said. Many
students are not used to the ideas
of classroom experiential play or
manipulative play.
“It’s been a roller coaster. It was
very difficult to connect on screens,”
he said. During the first four months
of the pandemic last year, when
schools were closed across the country,
Malone school psychologists
were among those making socially
distanced home visits.
Several psychologists shared how
one of the biggest concerns was finding
ways to connect with students
who dropped out of sight while
school buildings were shut down.
Peter Faustino, Scarsdale TA, said
prior to the pandemic he was hesitant
to do any telehealth, “but because
we were thrust into it, I found uses for
it. Kids seem open to technology.”
Some kids felt safer being in their
room when discussing tough topics,
he noted. One student creatively
used a different background on the
screen for each telehealth meeting in
order to reflect his mood.
“It was a signal to how the
student was feeling, and it sparked
discussion,” Faustino said.
On the flip side, Faustino said,
one student did not like what he was
saying and clicked off the computer,
shutting him out.
Faustino also noted that while
Scarsdale provided devices to every
student, not every district could do
that, and many students in the state
still struggle with reliable access to
the internet.
School psychologists have
also helped teachers, who have
been dealing with uprooted classrooms
and mixed teaching methods.
In Scarsdale, Faustino said psychologists created
a six-week professional
development
mindfulness and
meditation course for
teachers.
Speaking to best
practice for students
and educators, NYSUT
called for an end to the
practice of concurrent
or simultaneous teaching. “We appreciate
NYSUT being vocal about
that,” Van Houten said. “It
was so challenging.”
In suburban Gates-
Chili, where more than 18
countries are represented
in the student population,
veteran school psychologist
and TA member Stacy
Killings said mental health
needs “shot through the
roof.” Students missed
out on the daily interaction and some
had pressing needs, including not
being able to fill prescriptions due to
their parents’ unemployment.
“For a lot of kids, school is a safe
space,” she said.
Meeting with students online provided
an opportunity to connect not
just with the student, but with their
families as well.
“I’m going into their home (virtually);
they’re going into mine. I hear
dogs, I see kids, we’re at the kitchen
table,” she said. She used the phone
when online access wasn’t available
and promoted journaling for the
students.
A new energy is now filling the
schools, even with the still-necessary
masking and distancing precautions.
And with legislative support to fund
and implement proven practices, that
growth will continue.
“There is an excitement in this
building that feels amazing,” Killings
said.
FUTURE FORWARD
As schools continue to work
through pandemic uncertainty, now
is the time to implement proven
practices that establish strong foundations
for growth in our schools.
Research backs up what educators
know — we can lay the groundwork
for our students that will enable them
to thrive academically, socially and
emotionally. It’s up to all of us to outline
a path forward for our students;
we must act on what we have learned
from these crises.
Together we can outline a path
forward that will lead New York’s
schools to a chapter of profound
progress. NYSUT’s Future Forward
initiative calls for local districts and
the state to:
Support public schools as the
center of our communities.
- Support students’
social-emotional needs.
- Fight for racial justice.
- De-emphasize high-stakes testing.
- Adopt best practices for
instruction and technology.
Learn more about the statewide
union initiative at nysut.org/futureforward.