Latest Insights & Research

Stay informed with the latest public health research, insights, and evidence-based analysis from our team of experts.

News

New Funding Opportunity: Division 16 Anti-Racism Action Grants (Up to $2,000)

If you’ve been looking for a way to move anti-racism in school psychology from statements to sustained action, Division 16 (School Psychology) of the American Psychological Association has opened a timely opportunity worth your attention. The Division 16 Anti-Racism Action Grants are designed as catalyst grants—small but strategic awards intended to spark larger, long-term projects […]

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News

Next Week in School Psychology, December 17, 2025

I know our educator and teacher friends are checking out over the next few weeks. The Science keeps flowing, though. We’ve been working on something on youth trafficking that should be ready in the new year. Here’s some of the news stories we’re watching. Most schools are wary of AI. This one is embracing it. […]

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Neurodevelopmental

Which Kids Thrive in Inclusive Classrooms? New Autism Research Reveals Unexpected Clues

One preschooler spent just 2.3 seconds looking at a smiling adult—and that tiny moment predicted an entire year of developmental growth. Yes, you read that right. Two-point-three seconds. That’s the kind of eyebrow-raising detail tucked inside a major study on early childhood education for autistic children—one that challenges some assumptions many parents and educators hold […]

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Development

Why Kids Stop Moving—and What Schools Can Do About It

A nine-year-old’s average daily physical activity begins to decline years earlier than most adults realize. In fact, according to a sweeping review of 34 long-term studies, the slowdown begins as early as age seven, with the steepest plunge hitting right around age nine. If that number makes you stop and reread it, you’re not alone. […]

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Development

The Hidden Rules of the Classroom

A second-grader walked up to a classmate during free choice time, grinning, holding a LEGO tower he’d worked on for nearly 20 minutes. “Want to build with me?” he asked. The other child shrugged. “Not really.”Two more shook their heads.Another didn’t respond at all. By the time he returned to his seat, his smile had […]

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Development

How Body Pressure Hurts Teen Minds

Here’s a number that should stop every parent, teacher, and school leader in their tracks: over 60% of teens in a recent study skipped at least one major meal each day—and nearly 70% skipped breakfast entirely. Now here’s the twist no one saw coming: The teens skipping the most meals were also the ones scoring […]

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Mental health

The Silent Crisis Walking Our School Halls

A middle school counselor recently told me about a sixth grader who burst into tears during homeroom because her “brain felt too full.” No bullying, no family crisis, no dramatic event. Just life. School, sports, social media, friendships—all piling up until something snapped. If that stopped you for a second, good. Because this moment captures […]

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