Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    More than 1,000 DeKalb students need psych evals. They’ll likely wait

    By Cassidy Alexander - The Atlanta Journal-Constitution,

    29 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=06ekWx_0t3VplNF00

    More than 1,000 students in the DeKalb County School District are waiting for psychological evaluations, district officials said last week.

    The state’s third-largest district’s backlog has been brewing since at least 2020, thanks to school closures during the pandemic and staffing problems. DeKalb is exploring several ways to work through the waitlist, including hiring an outside company to evaluate students.

    In a recent survey the district conducted, parents, students, employees and community members all said mental health was their No. 1 concern . Adding more staff to support students’ mental health is one of the district’s top priorities for the next year’s budget .

    School psychologists are among several staff members who help take care of students’ mental health needs by connecting them with the appropriate services, intervening in crisis situations and training other staff members. When students are suspected of having a disability or need that could qualify them for special education services, teachers and administrators can refer them to be evaluated by a school psychologist (with their parents’ permission).

    As of March 2024, there were 1,337 students with signed consent forms waiting for that evaluation. By May 6, district staff told school board members the number had reached 1,600.

    Some of those students are required to be evaluated within 60 days of referral, and the district is on track to meet that timeline for those students, said Kimberly Franklin, the district’s coordinator of psychological services. Other students who are already receiving services and need to be reevaluated are the ones who are facing long wait times, Franklin said.

    Georgia students' private battle: Anxiety disorders in the classroom

    “What’s going to happen with the (students) that you can’t get to at this point?” asked board member Joyce Morley at a recent meeting.

    The school board approved a $300,000 contract with Horizons Psychological Assessment Center, located near Cumberland Mall in Cobb County, which will provide in-person assessments to 240 students over the summer. District staff members have volunteered to work through the summer on the backlog, and are already working evenings and weekends. The district also is partnering with Georgia State University, thanks to a five-year, $2.9 million federal grant to provide psychology students with internships and jobs upon graduation.

    Now, at the urging of board members and Superintendent Devon Horton, the district is considering whether to hire contractors who can evaluate students virtually. District staff had previously only considered those who could provide in-person services — but it may not have that luxury anymore.

    “I think the question becomes, can we afford to take that position without having access to get these evaluations done?” Horton said. “The further we go along, the more challenging it gets.”

    Georgia has one of the worst student-to-school psychologist ratios in the country, according to the most recent data available from the National Association of School Psychologists. The recommended ratio is 500 students to one psychologist. The national average in the 2022-2023 school year was 1,119 students to one psychologist; in Georgia, it was 2,077. Last year, the ratio in DeKalb was 1,890 students to one psychologist.

    DeKalb has had difficulty hiring and retaining providers, said Chief of Student Services Norman Sauce. Ten schools were without psychologists in the beginning of the year, with another three psychologists on leave.

    The evaluation backlog also has its roots in the pandemic, Sauce explained. DeKalb was one of the metro Atlanta districts that kept schools closed the longest . During that time, requests for evaluations kept coming in but were not being completed. Between January 2021 and the end of that school year, about 400 students were tested of the more than 1,300 waiting. The district has been struggling to get a grip on the issue since then.

    “This was a problem before the pandemic,” said board member Allyson Gevertz. “We’ve never had enough.”


    A history of psychological evaluation needs in DeKalb schools

    - 2019-20: 638 students needed evaluations at the end of the year.

    - 2020-21: As of January 2021, 1,330 students needed evaluations.

    - 2021-22: School year began with 972 students needing evaluations.

    - 2022-23: School year began with 535 students needing evaluations.

    - 2023-24: School year began with 775 students needing evaluations; as of early May, 1,600 students needed evaluations.

    Source: DeKalb County School District

    Get all the news about the Atlanta Braves delivered each morning. Sign up for Braves Report.

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular

    Comments / 0