PEI

Teachers won't be conducting learning disability assessments after all, minister says

Education critic Steven Myers says several teachers with psychology training would be able to help in assessing the roughly 400 students currently waiting.

Only clinical psychologists permitted to do assessments on P.E.I.

Jordan Brown was told there's a certain test that needs to be taken to have the skill to do student assessments (Natalia Goodwin/CBC)

P.E.I.'s education minister says Island teachers with some psychology training will not be conducting student assessments.

In October, in his first week as the province's new education minister, Jordan Brown said government was considering providing teachers with additional training in an effort to shorten the 3.25-year wait for the some 435 students waiting for school psychology assessments.

However, in response to a question raised by education critic Steven Myers in legislature on Friday, Brown said the P.E.I. Psychologists Registration Board told government only clinical psychologists can assess the students.

"We have met with the college that regulates psychologists on Prince Edward Island and they have indicated that there's a certain test that needs to be taken to have the skill to do these assessments," Brown said.

"And that only clinical psychologists on Prince Edward Island are able to do that."

According to Brown, he's been assured by Dr. Phillip Smith, of the registration board, that government is "doing everything that we possibly can do within the envelope of resources that we have right now."