2018
DOI: 10.1002/pits.22160
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Internationalization within school and educational psychology: Perspectives about positive indicators, critical considerations, and needs

Abstract: As the final paper within this special issue on Internationalization in School and Educational Psychology, this paper documents broad perspectives about internationalization from multiple school and educational psychologists who have worked in various contexts (e.g., in different professional roles and geographic locations). Based upon three core questions that contributors responded to, the paper systematically integrates all perspectives according to two primary categories: Strengths or Positive Indicators a… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…The definition and use of “school and educational psychology” in the present paper is consistent with how it is described within Begeny ()—including the occasional naming of the discipline simply as “school psychology” or “educational psychology” for concision, as well as the acknowledgement that much more debate and work is needed to develop one or more definitions that represent international and local perspectives (see Bernardo et al., ). Before proposing my working definition and conceptual model of internationalization, it will help to briefly summarize some of the content from the introduction to this special issue.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 73%
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“…The definition and use of “school and educational psychology” in the present paper is consistent with how it is described within Begeny ()—including the occasional naming of the discipline simply as “school psychology” or “educational psychology” for concision, as well as the acknowledgement that much more debate and work is needed to develop one or more definitions that represent international and local perspectives (see Bernardo et al., ). Before proposing my working definition and conceptual model of internationalization, it will help to briefly summarize some of the content from the introduction to this special issue.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 73%
“…In my view, although multinational collaboration is common as a type of internationalization work, it is not a requirement of doing work related to Category 1 or the other two categories described later. More specific types of Category 1 internationalization work include (1) empirical work that adapts, evaluates, and describes a school‐based intervention, assessment, or other form of practice (e.g., consultation) from one cultural or linguistic context to another (e.g., Dang et al., ); (2) scholarship that describes and utilizes theories, constructs, and/or methods that are not often described or used within Western scholarship or practice (e.g., Amesty & Paez, ; Bernardo, Yeung, Resurreccion, Resurreccion, & Khan, ); (3) scholarship focusing on topics of importance for school psychologists that come from regions or countries otherwise underrepresented in the scholarship (e.g., Amesty & Paez, ; Bernardo et al., ; Dang et al., ; Kim et al., ); (4) multi‐country collaboration that through theory, practice, or methodology utilizes values or norms that are representative of multiple cultures (e.g., Bernardo et al., ); and (5) scholarship that gathers relevant information to improve understanding about the discipline in an international context (e.g., generating estimates about the number of school psychology professionals in one or more countries, or conducting survey research about school psychology practices or needs within one or more countries).…”
Section: Connecting Past International Work and The Scholarship Withimentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…With such analyses, we may find, for example, that internationalization could have more negative than positive consequences for some professionals, or that the reasons and approaches to advance internationalization are not broadly supported and subsequently could minimize the benefits of internationalization in some nations where school and educational psychology is practiced. Although I have yet to identify scholarship that argues against promoting the forms of internationalization discussed previously, concerns have been raised about how it might be promoted (see, for example, Begeny et al., ; Leung et al., ; Ng & Noonan, ) and how its theoretical conceptualization may lack critical considerations, such as the redistributive (versus recognition) dimensions of social justice (Arfken, ; Bernardo et al., ). Therefore, it is both logical, and in the true spirit of internationalization, that intentional efforts be made to give more dialogue and representative voice about the potential advantages and/or disadvantages of internationalization for school and educational psychology.…”
Section: Possible Reasons To Advance Internationalization Within Psycmentioning
confidence: 99%