Written answers

Tuesday, 20 June 2017

Department of Education and Skills

Psychological Services

Photo of Kevin O'KeeffeKevin O'Keeffe (Cork East, Fianna Fail)
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484. To ask the Minister for Education and Skills if a person (details supplied) can be placed on a waiting list. [27124/17]

Photo of Richard BrutonRichard Bruton (Dublin Bay North, Fine Gael)
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I can inform the Deputy that my Department's National Educational Psychological Service (NEPS) provides educational psychology service to all primary and post primary schools through an assigned NEPS psychologist and in some cases receive assessment services through the Scheme for Commissioning Psychological Assessments (SCPA). Under this scheme schools can have a student assessment carried out by a member of the panel of private psychologists approved by NEPS, and NEPS will pay the psychologist the fees for this assessment directly.

In common with many other psychological services and best international practice, NEPS has adopted a consultative model of service. The focus is on empowering teachers to intervene effectively with pupils whose needs range from mild to severe and transient to enduring. Psychologists use a problem solving and solution focused consultative approach to maximize positive outcomes for these pupils. NEPS encourages schools to use a continuum based assessment and intervention process whereby each school takes responsibility for initial assessment, educational planning and remedial intervention for pupils with learning, emotional or behavioural difficulties. Teachers may consult their NEPS psychologist should they need to at this stage in the process. Only in the event of a failure to make reasonable progress, in spite of the school's best efforts in consultation with NEPS, will the psychologist become involved with an individual child for intensive intervention or assessment. This system allows psychologists to give early attention to urgent cases and also to help many more children indirectly than could be seen individually. It also ensures that children are not referred unnecessarily for psychological intervention.

Where parents have specific concerns in relation to the educational development of their child it is advised that they raise them, in the first instance, with the principal of the school concerned with a view to that principal discussing the appropriateness or otherwise of an educational assessment with the school's assigned NEPS psychologist.

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