Inside My Brain During a Psychoeducational Evaluation: What School Psychologists Look For in Reading Comprehension + Recall cover art

Inside My Brain During a Psychoeducational Evaluation: What School Psychologists Look For in Reading Comprehension + Recall

Inside My Brain During a Psychoeducational Evaluation: What School Psychologists Look For in Reading Comprehension + Recall

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Inside My Brain During a Psychoeducational Evaluation: What School Psychologists Look For in Reading Comprehension + Recall

If your child can read the words but can't tell you what they just read—and homework turns into a fight—this episode is for you. Dr. Amy Patenaude takes you inside her brain during a psychoeducational evaluation and shows what school psychologists are actually watching for in reading comprehension + recall, especially in 1st–2nd grade. You'll walk away with a simple framework (hello, 813), a Velcro-vs-Teflon way to think about "it didn't stick," and a 7-day experiment you can use to get clearer answers fast.

In this episode you'll learn
  • Why a psychoeducational evaluation is not a "verdict" (it's translation + detective work)
  • The Velcro vs. Teflon reading metaphor for kids who can decode but can't hold onto meaning
  • The 813 framework: the 8 silent questions an evaluator is tracking in real time, and the 3 big buckets that explain the pattern
  • How to tell the difference between a comprehension issue and a recall/output load issue
  • What "We don't see that here" often means—and how to respond without arguing
  • Exactly what to ask for at school so support is specific (not "more time" and vibes)
Tiny Wins to try this week
  • Run the 7-day reading experiment: compare answering questions with the text available (text-referenced) vs. without looking back (memory-only).
  • Use "mastery sampling" for comprehension: fewer questions, same depth (one straightforward, one vocab-in-context, one main idea/inference).
  • Try one scaffold one time: preview 1–2 questions before reading or do a one-sentence "gist" after each paragraph.
  • Start a tiny clue log: what task, what demand (more language? more output? end-of-day fatigue?), what helped.
  • Use this school script: "Can we compare text-referenced vs memory-only answering, reduce question load for 7–10 days, and track accuracy, prompts needed, and independence?"

Pick one. One is enough.

Free resources
  • Boredom Buster Guide — https://psyched2parent.myflodesk.com/boredomebusterguide
  • Big Feeling Decoder — https://psyched2parent.myflodesk.com/bigfeelingsdecoder
  • 50 AI Prompts for Tired Parents — https://psyched2parent.myflodesk.com/aiprompts4parents
Disclaimer

"This podcast is for informational and educational purposes only and is not medical, psychological, or legal advice. Listening to this podcast does not create a provider-client relationship. If you're concerned about your child's mental health, safety, or development, please consult a qualified professional in your area."

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