Presenter(s):
Jennifer Puig, PhD
This webinar focuses on the use of the WRAML3 in educational assessments and its clinical validity in child and adolescent populations.
Webinar topics will include:
- An introduction to the new WRAML3
- Relations to other measures frequently used in schools
- Illustrative case studies
Presenter(s):
Ann E. Boehm, PhD
This webinar will provide an evidence-based framework for assessing and teaching relational concepts essential for learning and emotional regulation. Dr. Boehm will discuss how this is done with students with diverse needs, such as those with disrupted learning, autism spectrum disorder, visual or hearing loss, and cognitive challenges. Checklists and key references will be provided.
Presenter(s):
Gloria Maccow, PhD
To learn the skills and concepts presented in the classroom, children must pay attention, register and assign meaning to information they see and hear, and store that information in memory. The transition from infancy to early childhood is associated with increased proficiency in tasks requiring attention, working memory, and cognitive flexibility, all of which help to predict rate of learning.
Presenter(s):
Dean Delis, Ph.D., A.B.P.P.
In Part 2 of this webinar series, Dr. Delis will provide guidelines for making clinical interpretations of the findings of the D-REF Adult. Dr. Delis will also discuss the use of an optional feature of the D-REF Adult Score Report that provides a list of specific recommendations for interventions for EF problems targeted to each examinee’s profile of EF strengths and weaknesses. A case example will be provided to illustrate the different interpretive guidelines.
Presenter(s):
Daniella Maglione, Ed.S. , Gloria Maccow, Ph.D.
This webinar will describe a best-practices approach that takes cultural and linguistic factors into account when assessing ELL students. This approach produces valid assessment results to determine eligibility for direct specialized instruction, identify cognitive and academic strengths and needs, and assist in reducing the misidentification of ELLs for Exceptional Student Education (ESE) programs.
Presenter(s):
Dr. Dean Delis
In this webinar, Dr. Delis will discuss the challenges of in-person cognitive assessment in the age of COVID-19. He will illustrate a system that he developed and explain the expensive lessons he learned through trial and error during the process.
Presenter(s):
C. Munro Cullum, PhD, ABPP
This one-hour webinar will provide an overview of the evidence supporting teleNP and models for teleNP practice in the context of current events. Methods, procedures, and “tips” for how we begin to return to “normal” neuropsychological practice will be discussed. Bring your questions as there will be time for Q&A.
Presenter(s):
Anne-Marie Kimbell, PhD, Peter Entwistle, PhD
The number of people living with cognitive impairment has increased alongside the rapidly aging population in the US. Additionally, since the onset of COVID-19, there has been emerging evidence that some recovering from this illness are experiencing residual cognitive impairment.
This one-hour webinar will define cognitive impairment and several related terms and discuss the importance and process of screening for cognitive impairment.
Presenter(s):
Anne-Marie Kimbell, PhD
This webinar will provide a general overview of what cognitive rehabilitation is, who the participants are, where it takes place, and who the providers are. In addition, we will discuss some of the types of cognitive strategies, including computer training, utilized in cognitive rehabilitation.
Presenter(s):
Dr. Seth Grossman, PsyD
Dr. Grossman will provide an aspirational collaborative framework for using information from the MCMI-IV & MACI-II to help clients gain a more equitable sense of self in uncertain times, help identify & re-establish a sense of normalcy, and seek to promote resilience and avert mental health crises.