South Carolina Association of

School Psychologists

Supporting learning and mental health of youth in South Carolina

2025 Spring Workshops -School Psycs and Mental Health

  • 27 Mar 2025
  • 7:30 AM
  • 28 Mar 2025
  • 4:30 PM
  • Hilton Myrtle Beach Resort AND Zoom

Registration

  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • SCASP CEU - Non-Winthrop
  • Please complete and send the attached forms to Winthrop and send payment to Winthrop. Please indicate which days you are attending for Winthrop credit. If you would like to register for other days for SCASP CEU's, please complete a second online registration and send that payment to SCASP. Email scaschpsy@bellsouth.net with questions.

** Want more renewal credits for the same workshops? Consider registering for the event for Winthrop University credit: https://gradschool.winthrop.edu/register/?id=412a4a91-bbc5-4f82-81a3-682ea87cb1e5  Please remember that you MUST also complete the SCASP registration form indicating you are attending for Winthrop credit.

SOUTH CAROLINA ASSOCIATION OF SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGISTS

2025 Spring Conference

School Psycs and Mental Health

March 27-28, 2024

Myrtle Beach Hilton

AND Virtual through Zoom

Hotel reservations: 

call Reservations at (800) 876 - 0010, Option 3 for Hilton Myrtle Beach

 https://www.hilton.com/en/attend-my-event/myrbhhh-asp-cbe01380-af61-485c-b7f7-4e017810de38/


SCASP is approved by the National Association of School Psychologists to offer continuing education for school psychologists.  SCASP maintains responsibility for the program. 



CONFERENCE SCHEDULE

Full-day Workshop

Thursday, March 27, 2025

7:30 AM – 8:30 AM Snacks/Coffee and Registration

8:30 AM – 4:30 PM  Full-day Workshop (1 1/2 hour break for lunch)

Promoting Students’ Complete Mental Health in a Multi-Tiered Framework

Research provides robust evidence that students’ mental health is closely tied to their school behavior and academic achievement, and suggests critical developmental periods for prevention and intervention efforts. In addition to preventing and reducing mental health problems, fostering students’ subjective well-being (i.e., happiness) is essential to ensuring optimal outcomes. This professional development will convey best practices in promotion of student complete mental health, through implementation of universal programs and practices that build social-emotional-behavioral competencies and prevent psychological problems, identification of students in need of supplemental services, and provision of evidence-based interventions to enhance the subjective well-being of all students and teachers in the classroom. 

 Morning session: Supporting Students’ Mental Health in a Multi-Tiered Framework

This workshop describes best practices in promotion of all students’ emotional and behavioral health, in part to eradicate barriers to learning that stem from mental health problems.  Empirical links between students’ mental health and academic success will be summarized. This research-based rationale for school mental health services suggests priority needs, as well as critical developmental periods for prevention and intervention efforts. Participants will learn best practice models for promoting student mental health through a multi-tiered framework that includes universal (Tier 1), targeted (Tier 2), and indicated/individual and crisis services (Tier 3). Addressing the Tier 1 level, participants will learn programs and practices to promote all children’s emotional well-being and reduce/prevent emotional and behavioral problems. In addition to preventing and reducing mental health problems, enhancing students’ subjective well-being is essential to ensure optimal outcomes. This presentation will put forth a model of complete mental health that directs attention to both positive and negative indicators of well-being and problems, respectively. This dual-factor model has been incorporated into statewide and district planning for fostering students complete mental health (e.g., https://www.cgcs.org/cms/lib/DC00001581/Centricity/Domain/313/Spotlight%201%20Fostering%20Mental%20Health%20Final.pdf and https://global.oup.com/academic/product/fostering-the-emotional-well-being-of-our-youth-9780190918873?cc=us&lang=en&). At the Tier 2 level, participants will become familiar with example evidence-based options for time-limited programs for common mental health challenges. Planning for the Tier 3 level, participants will consider district personnel and community resources likely to be the most appropriate partners for various mental health services.  

Learning Objectives:

Upon completion of this half-day training, attendees will have knowledge in each of the following areas:

  • A.    How Complete Mental Health Links to Students’ Academic Success
  • a.     Knowledge  of traditional and current conceptualizations of mental health (e.g., disease/distress model vs. comprehensive models of “Complete Mental Health” from a positive psychology perspective that include indicators of wellness in addition to emotional distress)
  • b.     Knowledge of studies that demonstrate links between students’ mental health (including happiness) and their academic achievement and schooling experiences
  •  
  • B.    Essential Features of a Multi-Tiered System of Supports to Promote Complete Mental Health
  • a.     Knowledge of evidence-based programs and practices recommended for inclusion in a multi-tiered framework for school mental health that includes universal (Tier 1), targeted (Tier 2), and indicated/individual and crisis services (Tier 3).
  • b.     Knowledge of assessment options, such as universal screening of student mental health, to systematically identify students for supplemental support through Tiers 2 and 3.
  • c.     Knowledge of systems change considerations during implementation of a MTSS for complete mental health, including creating school teams and partnerships, securing buy-in from key stakeholders, and data-based decision making.

Afternoon Session: Positive Psychology in Education: Fostering Happiness and Relationships at School to Improve Student Outcomes 

This workshop will convey best practices for promoting student complete mental health, through positive psychology programs and practices that generate positive emotions and build social-emotional-behavioral competencies. Positive psychology conceptualizes mental health as the presence of strengths, virtues, and happiness. This training will increase participants’ knowledge of how to assess and promote students’ happiness.  Evidence-based positive psychology programs and practices across a range of psychological services will be reviewed, including universal (schoolwide and classwide), small-group, and individualized interventions. Participants will learn how to administer, score, and use tools to measure positive psychology constructs, such as life satisfaction and character strengths. Participants will learn specific programs and practices for promoting all children’s happiness through strategies that target improvements in the factors correlated with children’s subjective well-being, including positive teacher-student relationships evident in schools with a healthy climate, as well as students’ personal levels of gratitude, hope, and use of character strengths. 

Learning Objectives:

Upon completion of this half-day training, attendees will have knowledge in each of the following areas:

  • A.    Introduction to Positive Psychology: Understanding and Assessing Key Constructs Relevant to Students’ Happiness
  1. Knowledge of key constructs within the field of positive psychology, including subjective well-being (i.e., happiness), character strengths, strong relationships, and how these constructs relate to youth resilience
  2. Knowledge of how to assess positive psychology constructs (i.e., subjective well-being, character strengths) among youth and how to use data from such assessments in (a) universal screenings of student mental health, and (b) progress monitoring and evaluative efforts
  3. Knowledge of how positive psychology fits in with other services in a multi-tiered system of supports for student mental health 
  1. Positive Psychology Programs and Practices to Increase Happiness
    1. Knowledge of a time-limited intervention to improve teachers’ happiness and reduce burnout
    2. Knowledge of universal (Tier 1) programs and practices for promoting students’ well-being through schoolwide and classwide prevention efforts that strengthen relationships, and cultivate positive emotions about the past, present, and future
    3. Knowledge of targeted  (Tier 2 and Tier 3) positive psychology interventions for promoting students’ happiness. 

Shannon Suldo, Ph.D.,is a Professor in the School Psychology Program at the University of South Florida.  She received her Ph.D. in School Psychology from the University of South Carolina in 2004. She is a Licensed Psychologist in the state of Florida and continues to provide school-based mental health services to youth in the Tampa area. She has extensive research and clinical experiences in school-based mental health services, including: establishing empirical links between student mental health and academic success; conceptualizing and measuring student mental health in a dual-factor model that considers psychopathology and well-being; evidence-based positive psychology interventions for promoting positive indicators of student well-being; schoolwide strategies to identify youth with mental health problems; and supporting teachers’ emotional well-being. She also studies the stress, coping strategies, and mental health of high school students in accelerated courses, and is Principal Investigator of two large federal grant to identify and build factors that predict success among students in Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate courses. She is also Principal Investigator of a large federal grant to evaluate a selective positive psychology intervention to increase middle school students’ subjective well-being. She has published more than 75 studies that convey findings from her research on how to assess and promote complete mental health. She is the author of Promoting Student Happiness: Positive Psychology Interventions in Schools, a 2016 book within the Guilford Practical Intervention in the Schools Series; co-editor of Fostering the Emotional Well-Being of our Youth: A School-Based Approach, a 2021 book published by Oxford; and co-editor of the Handbook of Positive Psychology in Schools: Supporting Process and Practice (3rd edition), a 2022 book published by Routledge (see https://www.routledge.com/Handbook-of-Positive-Psychology-in-Schools-Supporting-Process-and-Practice/Allen-Furlong-Vella-Brodrick-Suldo/p/book/9780367855864)          

Friday, March 28, 2025

7:30 AM – 8:00 AM Snacks/Coffee and Registration

8:00 AM – 4:30 PM - Full day workshop

 

Integrating Mental Health Services within a Multi-tiered system of support

Integrating and Evaluating  Mental Health Systems within Schools
Solution-focused Emotional and Behavioral Assessment (SEBA) Model
·       Outline of Components of SEBA Model (i.e., serviceable base rate)
·       Outline of SEBA model decisional tiers -Case Study with SEBA Model (i.e., universal screening data)
Essential Components to Tier I Services
·       Prevention Science Frameworks and Research
·       Implementation and Evaluation of Tier I Services
·       Consultative Approaches and Case Study for Facilitate Tier I Services
Universal Screening
·       Research and Impact on Student/System Outcomes
·       Outline of Screening Measures and Components

Connecting Universal Screening to Intervention

·       Revisit SEBA Model decisional tiers
Effective Components for Tier 2 intervention
·       Implementation and Evaluation of Tier 2 Services
·       Problem Analysis for Tier 2 Services
SEBA Model Group Activity Facilitation
·       Small Group Activity for Screening to Intervening Using the SEBA model
Considerations for Sustainability

Logistical Considerations for Implementing and Sustaining Integrated Mental Health Systems within Schools


Learning Objectives 
Conceptualize key components necessary to integrate mental health services within Multi-Tiered Systems of Support at Tiers 1 and 2
Understand and describe how the Solution-focused Emotional and Behavioral Assessment (SEBA) model processes can be utilized in integrating mental health services within Multi-Tiered Systems of Support at Tiers 1 and 2 levels
Identify relevant resources and best practices for sustainability and scalability for integration of  mental health services within Multi-Tiered Systems of Support at Tiers 1 and 2 levels
 

Bio: Dr. Nate von der Embse is a Professor of School Psychology at the University of South Florida and Co-Executive Director of the School Mental Health Collaborative, a national research and technical assistance center. His research improves educational decision-making by identifying the influence of external policies and contextual drivers while developing novel solutions to improve the use of preventative school mental health services. He received the 2018 Lightner Witmer Award for early career scholarship from Division 16 of APA, is a co-developer of the SAEBRS screening tools that are used in all 50 states, and the author of the recent book, Conducting Behavioral and Social-Emotional Assessments in MTSS: Screen to Intervene.


      



                







Spring 2026 SCASP Conference Schedule

Thursday, March 12, 2026

8:00 AM – 8:30 AM              Continental Breakfast/Coffee and Registration

8:30 AM – 4:15 PM              Full day Workshop 

11:30-1:00 PM                    Lunch: On your own or Option to join us on the steps of the SC State House

A person with his arms crossed AI-generated content may be incorrect.Presenter: Howie Knoff, PhD, NCSP, is an international consultant on school improvement, behavior, and multi-tiered systems of support. Howie was a university professor (22 years), and State Department of Education grant director (13 years). The author of 25 books and 100+ articles/book chapters, he was the 21st president of the National Association of School Psychologists.

Howie is the President of Project ACHIEVE Educational Solutions which has implemented his nationally-known, evidence-based (through SAMHSA) school improvement program—Project ACHIEVE—in thousands of schools or districts over the past 40 years. An international expert on school safety and discipline, classroom management and school-wide behavior MTSS systems, student engagement and achievement, and interventions with behaviorally challenging students. 

Title: Behavioral Interventions for Disobedient, Disruptive, Defiant, and Disturbed Students

Effective school districts implement comprehensive multi-tiered systems for students demonstrating social, emotional, or behavioral challenges. This workshop discusses selected Tier 2/3 (strategic/intensive) interventions for students to address their school and classroom needs, connects these interventions to the “Seven High-Hit Reasons” for these challenges, and demonstrates how to use AI to facilitate the intervention implementation process.

NASP Domains: 1, 4, 6, 10

Description: The Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESSA) requires districts and schools to develop multi-tiered systems of services, supports, strategies, and interventions for students who are at-risk, underachieving, unresponsive, and/or unsuccessful.  Relative to students’ social, emotional, or behavioral interactions, this often requires functional assessments that lead to (what are sometimes called) Tier 2 or Tier 3 interventions that sometimes involve comprehensive school-based mental health supports.

There are many reasons why students demonstrate angry, aggressive, and acting out behavior in their schools or classrooms—or anxious, withdrawal, and “checking out” behavior.  The U.S. Surgeon General’s office and Institute of Medicine have recognized that one in five students will experience significant social, emotional, or behavioral problems during their school-aged years.  Yet, two-thirds or more of these students do not receive the social, emotional, or behavioral services needed to help address their difficulties—sometimes because schools do not understand why their problems are occurring, and what to do about them. 

This presentation will focus on the Tier 2 (strategic) and Tier 3 (intensive) interventions that schools need to implement to assist challenging students who are demonstrating social, emotional, and/or behavioral challenges in their classrooms or across their schools.  In focusing on these interventions, ways to translate the research that typically underlies these interventions into practical and realistic classroom-based strategies will be particularly emphasized.  Thus, the interventions discussed will be evidence-based, teacher-friendly, and field-tested. We will also integrate AI and effective AI prompts into the problem-solving and intervention generation and implementation process.

Initially, the presentation will provide a context for the three tiers in a multi-tiered system.  Briefly, at the prevention (Tier 1) level, we will discuss the essential importance of teaching social skills and the behavioral principles underlying skill-based training.  A differentiation between teaching through incentives and consequences will follow, along with a brief discussion of the negative effects of punishment and zero tolerance policies.  Finally, the importance of different facets of consistency will be presented and how inconsistency can undermine the entire approach to prevention and instruction.

Strategic intervention (Tier 2) will be defined as services, supports, and strategies that groups or individual students need to directly address their classroom functioning and interactions.  Here, the presentation will discuss the limitations of diagnostic labels, and the importance of determining why (especially at Tier 2) students are demonstrating social, emotional, and/or behavioral challenges, and how to link functional assessment to strategic or intensive interventions.  To this end, given the advances of the past 30 years, a “21st Century” functional assessment approach will be briefly described that identifies the “7 High-Hit Reasons” for students’ challenging behavior, and how these high-hit reasons align with the specific challenging behaviors and interventions below. 

Intensive or crisis-management (Tier 3) interventions will be addressed as those (a) that are similar to Tier 2 interventions, but require more-intensive or more-clinical implementations; and/or (b) that involve a more comprehensive mental health perspective and/or community-based health and mental health partnerships.

Given this multi-tiered context, the remainder of the presentation will sample and discuss in detail Tier 2 and 3 interventions that address the following range of challenging student behaviors:

  • Not following classroom or school expectations

  • Not demonstrating effective interpersonal skills

  • Not complying or accepting consequences

  • Not exhibiting self- or emotional-control

  • Not motivated to make good choices or to change bad choices

  • Behaving inconsistently across staff, settings, and situations

  • Stress- and trauma-related student emotions and interactions

The interventions themselves will be organized in those that:  Increase or Establish New Student Behaviors; Decrease or Eliminate Inappropriate Behaviors; Teach Attention and Engagement Skills; Teach Social, Self-Management, and Self-Control Skills; Increase Student Motivation; Enhance Peer Engagement/Initiation and/or Peer Response/Management Skills; and address Student Stress or Trauma.  

Among the specific interventions that may be sampled for discussion will be:

Increasing Behavior: Prompting, Cueing, Stimulus Control (Full), Positive Reinforcement/Schedules of Reinforcement, Group Contingencies—Intervention Examples, Good Behavior Game, and Self-Management/Self-Control

Decreasing Behavior: DRO/I/L/A, Thought Stopping, Extinction, Overcorrection, Response Cost, and Time Out

Stress and Trauma: Cognitive-Behavioral Interventions/Therapies

For each intervention discussed, participants will learn:

  • How to implement the intervention step-by-step

  • The behaviors that the intervention will most successfully change

  • Which interventions to use with what age levels

  • How the intervention will work with behaviors that differ in their frequency, severity, or intensity

  • How to evaluate the short-term and long-term outcomes of the intervention

Learner Objectives:

  1. Why interventions need to focus on students’ social, emotional, and behavioral needs, and not their diagnostic labels

  2. A range of social, emotional, or behavioral interventions that schools need to implement to assist students who are behaviorally challenging in their classrooms or common school areas.

  3. To recognize the interdependence of student, teacher, instructional, curriculum, and other “environmental factors” that must be considered when implementing interventions. 

  4. What information and data need to be collected as part of the Problem Identification and Problem Analysis steps of the functional assessment process so that the right interventions are selected for implementation.

  5. The seven “high-hit” reasons for students’ social, emotional, and/or behavioral challenges, and how these link to a range of research-based interventions. 

  6. The specific characteristics and implementation steps of a number of selected interventions that increase or establish new student behaviors; decrease or eliminate inappropriate behaviors; teach attention and engagement skills; teach social, self-management, and self-control skills; increase student motivation; and enhance peer engagement/initiation and/or peer response/management skills.

  7. The differences between Tier 2 and Tier 3 interventions.

  8. How to integrate AI and effective AI prompts into the problem-solving and intervention generation and implementation process.

This presentation will provide case examples as appropriate.  Discussion and participants’ school-based applications of the interventions with their own challenging students will be strongly encouraged.

Friday, March 13, 2026

8:00 AM – 8:30 AM               Continental Breakfast/Coffee and Registration

8:30 AM – 4:15 PM               Full Day Workshop

11:30 AM – 1:00 PM                   Lunch: On your own or Option to participate in SLD round table discussion

Presenter: Dr. Andrew Shanock, is a Professor of School Psychology.  Dr. Shanock specializes in cognitive and academic assessment.  He has served A person in a white shirt and green tie AI-generated content may be incorrect.as President of the Trainers of School Psychologists (TSP), NY Association of School Psychologists (NYASP), and the Trainers of School Psychologists: New York (TSPNY). Dr. Shanock is the chair of the NASP Bilingual Interest Group (BIG).  Dr. Shanock has been a featured speaker at the national and state level for a variety of educational professionals, including school psychologists, speech language pathologists, and administrators. He consults with school districts around the country to promote issues such as collaborative assessment, MTSS/RtI, and instructional support team building.  Dr. Shanock’s presentations are informative, entertaining, and interactive.  


Title: Collaborative Assessment and MTSS within a Science of Reading Framework: Identification and Intervention for EL and monolingual children 

NASP Domains:1, 3, 8, 10

Description: Although the scientific evidence base for effective reading has existed for decades, the term “the Science of Reading” has gained traction in the last few years, leading to some misunderstandings. Strong core instruction grounded in Science of Reading principles is crucial. But in isolation, even that’s not enough. To be powerful and effective, a literacy system needs to bring together assessment, curriculum, intervention, and personalized learning, all of which must be done with a comprehensive understanding of language development in monolingual and bilingual learners.

This full day workshop will address components of reading, including language development, and the issues in developing an efficient and effective MTSS process whereby data collection, communication, and appropriate interventions occur. Procedures on how to organize/perform a collaborative cross battery assessment between the SLP and school psychologist and how it can assist in data collection, collaborative interpretation, and intervention development will be discussed in detail. Participants will gain a strong working knowledge of and ability to differentiate between dyslexia, and SLD, using the Simple View of Reading framework. Throughout the workshop, there will be in-depth discussions on how to addressing the appropriate assessment methodology and interventions for English Language Learners. 

Learning Outcomes: 

  1. Attendees will have a practice-ready Patterns of Strengths and Weaknesses (PSW) model on how to organize, interpret data from all school-based service providers. Report writing templates will be shared. 

  2. Attendees will have a solid knowledge base on how to incorporate the Cultural Linguistic Matrix Interpretive Matrix (CLIM) in interpretation of assessment data. 

  3. Attendees will have an understanding on how monolingual and bilingual professionals can effectively evaluate an English Language Learner to determine dyslexia. 

  4. Attendees will have gain a step-by-step process on the consideration of assessments and appropriate interpretation of data. 

  5. Attendees will have a well-rounded understanding of systemic issues that impact the implementation of MTSS policies and procedures.

  6. Attendees will know which research and evidenced based brief assessments to use for progress monitoring and determining which reading skill that needs to be addressed. 

  7. Attendees will be able to immediately locate on the web free academic intervention resources to address reading, writing, and math skills. 


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