(a) License Requirements. An applicant for licensure
as a specialist in school psychology must:
(1) hold an appropriate graduate degree;
(2) provide proof of specific graduate level coursework
(3) provide proof of an acceptable internship;
(4) provide proof of passage of all examinations required
by the Council; and
(5) meet the requirements imposed under §501.2525(a)(3)
- (9) of the Occupations Code.
(b) Applicants who hold active certification as a Nationally
Certified School Psychologist (NCSP) are considered to have met all
requirements for licensure under this rule except for passage of the
Jurisprudence Examination. Applicants relying upon this subsection
must provide the Council with their NCSP certification number.
(c) Applicants who graduated from a training program
approved by the National Association of School Psychologists or accredited
in School Psychology by the American Psychological Association are
considered to have met all training and internship requirements for
licensure under this rule. Applicants relying upon this subsection
must submit an official transcript indicating the degree and date
the degree was awarded or conferred.
(d) Applicants who do not hold active NCSP certification,
or who did not graduate from a training program approved by the National
Association of School Psychologists or accredited in School Psychology
by the American Psychological Association, must have completed a graduate
degree in psychology from a regionally accredited institution of higher
education. Applicants applying under this subsection must have completed,
either as part of their graduate degree program or after conferral
of their graduate degree, at least 60 graduate level semester credit
hours from a regionally accredited institution of higher education.
A maximum of 12 internship hours may be counted toward this requirement.
For purposes of this rule, a graduate degree in psychology means the
name of the candidate's major or program of studies is titled psychology.
(e) Applicants applying under subsection (d) of this
section must submit evidence of graduate level coursework as follows:
(1) Psychological Foundations, including:
(A) biological bases of behavior;
(B) human learning;
(C) social bases of behavior;
(D) multi-cultural bases of behavior;
(E) child or adolescent development;
(F) psychopathology or exceptionalities;
(2) Research and Statistics;
(3) Educational Foundations, including any of the following:
(A) instructional design;
(B) organization and operation of schools;
(C) classroom management; or
(D) educational administration;
(4) Assessment, including:
(A) psychoeducational assessment;
(B) socio-emotional, including behavioral and cultural,
assessment;
(5) Interventions, including:
(A) counseling;
(B) behavior management;
(C) consultation;
(6) Professional, Legal and Ethical Issues; and
(7) A Practicum.
(f) Applicants applying under subsection (d) of this
section must have completed an internship with a minimum of 1200 hours
and that meets the following criteria:
(1) At least 600 of the internship hours must have
been completed in a public school.
(2) The internship must be provided through a formal
course of supervised study from a regionally accredited institution
of higher education in which the applicant was enrolled; or the internship
must have been obtained in accordance with Council §463.11(d)(1)
and (d)(2)(C) of this section.
(3) Any portion of an internship completed within a
public school must be supervised by a Licensed Specialist in School
Psychology, and any portion of an internship not completed within
a public school must be supervised by a Licensed Psychologist.
(4) No experience which is obtained from a supervisor
who is related within the second degree of affinity or consanguinity
to the supervisee may be utilized.
(5) Unless authorized by the Council, supervised experience
received from a supervisor practicing with a restricted license may
not be utilized to satisfy the requirements of this rule.
(6) Internship hours must be obtained in not more than
two placements. A school district, consortium, and educational co-op
are each considered one placement.
(7) Internship hours must be obtained in not less than
one or more than two academic years.
(8) An individual completing an internship under this
rule must be designated as an intern.
(9) Interns must receive no less than two hours of
supervision per week, with no more than half being group supervision.
The amount of weekly supervision may be reduced, on a proportional
basis, for interns working less than full-time.
(10) The internship must include direct intern application
of assessment, intervention, behavior management, and consultation,
for children representing a range of ages, populations and needs.
(g) Trainee Status.
(1) An applicant for the specialist in school psychology
license who has not yet passed the Jurisprudence Examination, but
who otherwise meets all licensing requirements under this rule, may
practice in the public schools under the supervision of a Licensed
Specialist in School Psychology, as a trainee for not more than one
year.
(2) A trainee status letter shall be issued to an applicant
upon proof of licensing eligibility, save and except proof of passage
of the Jurisprudence Examination.
(3) An individual with trainee status is subject to
all applicable laws governing the practice of psychology.
(4) A trainee's status may be suspended or revoked
upon a showing of a violation of the Council's rules or any law pertaining
to the practice of psychology, and the individual may be made the
subject of an eligibility proceeding. The one-year period for trainee
status shall not be tolled by any suspension of the trainee status.
(5) Following official notification from the Council
upon passage of the Jurisprudence Examination or the expiration of
one year, whichever occurs first, an individual's trainee status shall
terminate.
(6) An individual practicing under trainee status must
be designated as a trainee.
(h) Provision of psychological services in the public
schools by unlicensed individuals.
(1) An unlicensed individual may provide psychological
services under supervision in the public schools if:
(A) the individual is enrolled in an internship, practicum
or other site based training in a psychology program in a regionally
accredited institution of higher education;
(B) the individual has completed an internship that
meets the requirements of this rule, and has submitted an application
for licensure as a Licensed Specialist in School Psychology to the
Council that has not been denied or returned; or
(C) the individual has been issued a trainee status
letter.
(2) An unlicensed individual may not provide psychological
services in a private school setting unless the activities or services
provided are exempt under §501.004 of the Psychologists' Licensing
Act.
(3) An unlicensed individual may not engage in the
practice of psychology under paragraph (1)(B) of this subsection for
more than forty-five days following receipt of the application by
the Council.
(4) The authority to practice referenced in paragraph
(1)(B) and (C) of this subsection is limited to the first or initial
application filed by an individual under this rule, but is not applicable
to any subsequent applications filed under this rule. The Council
will not issue more than one trainee status letter to an individual,
regardless of the number of applications filed.
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