[OBOPeNews] REMINDER! Survey - EPPP & PSYPACT- Please Respond by 4-24-23
OBOP updates
obpeenews at omls.oregon.gov
Mon Apr 17 15:15:02 PDT 2023
Thank you to everyone who has responded so far to the EPPP & PSYPACT Survey<https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/OBOP_ASPPB>. For those who have not yet completed the survey but still wish to, please do so by April 24, 2023. We will be closing the survey and compiling the results after that time.
***We have added a helpful resource to respond to questions about these options: EPPP & PSYPACT Q&A<https://www.oregon.gov/psychology/Documents/EPPP-PSYPACT_QA.pdf>.*** Thank you to Oregon Psychological Association leadership for your collaboration on this effort.
Thank you,
Oregon Board of Psychology
3218 Pringle Road SE, Suite 130
Salem, OR 97302-6309
Data Classification: Level 1, Published
From: STASHEK LaRee * MHRA
Sent: Tuesday, March 21, 2023 4:27 PM
To: OBPE Listserve (obpeenews at omls.oregon.gov) <obpeenews at omls.oregon.gov>
Subject: Survey - EPPP & PSYPACT- Please Respond by 4-24-23
Oregon psychologists and legislators are advocating to decrease barriers to licensure by considering:
1. Dropping the EPPP (a standardized national psychology examination) requirement;
2. Joining PSYPACT (facilitating agreements between states for telepsychology practice across borders).
The details:
1. The EPPP and standardized testing in general may pose additional expense and equity issues for psychologists seeking Oregon licensure.
* Although: some psychologists note the importance of a competency exam to ensure psychologist readiness to enter independent practice, and the license transferability allowed by use of the same exam by every state.
1. Starting January 2026, ASPPB will no longer offer states the option to use just the first part of the EPPP; it is a both or none scenario. Oregon is automatically set to require both parts of the EPPP in January 2026 unless a legislative change is pursued.
2. In order for an individual to become part of PSYPACT, the state must be designated as a PSYPACT state (which would require legislation in Oregon), and the individual must apply through PSYPACT, whose requirements include passing parts I and II of the EPPP.
3. In order to authorize individuals to take the EPPP, the state must have a requirement for passage of the EPPP in the state's licensure process (non-EPPP states are not allowed to authorize individuals to take the EPPP).
What it means: Because of these logistics, the options of dropping the EPPP requirement and joining PSYPACT are essentially mutually exclusive.
Help Us With What's Next: OBOP would like to seek your opinion on which direction is most desirable as we move forward in reducing barriers to licensure and protecting the public with the highest quality of care. Would you please respond to the survey here?
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/OBOP_ASPPB
Please respond by April 24, 2023.
Thank you,
Oregon Board of Psychology
3218 Pringle Road SE, Suite 130
Salem, OR 97302-6309
Data Classification: Level 1, Published
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