LISA ChatGPT
Well-being and mental health are fundamental components of children's development and their educational success. Yet, more than one in four children face challenges such as neurodevelopmental and learning disorders (like Specific Learning Disorder, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, etc.), mood disorders (like anxiety, depression), or emotional and behavioral disorders.
In the absence of detection and intervention, these challenges often lead to severe consequences for the child and those around them: lack of interest, dropping out, bullying, violence, suicidal actions...
The LISA research-action program provides educational stakeholders with tools to identify, understand, and collaborate, to support each child, both in and outside of school, based on their strengths and needs. Co-constructed by teachers, families, researchers, clinicians, and other educational actors, LISA develops a community, a training program, and a digital platform.
LISA is originally developed and prototyped in France, initiated by iféa, a network of innovative schools, and the Learning Planet Institute. LISA is developed Under the supervision of its scientific committee, including Ariel B. Lindner, Bennett L. Leventhal, Richard Delorme, Bruno Falissard, Caroline Huron, Yasser Kazhaal, and others; a dedicated team including Anirudh Krishnakumar, Naima Page, Kseniia Konischeva, Arno Klein, and others; and key partner institutions including the Child Mind Institute, INSERM U1284, CléPsy, and the Robert Debré Hospital in Paris.
The project has received support from the French government to be deployed in 200 schools within the Académie de Créteil, Académie de Paris, Académie de Versaille, and the Mission laïque française.
LISA aims to provide stakeholders in the education of children and adolescents with evidence-based, actionable, and accessible training and guidance in the process of identifying and supporting their unique strengths and needs. As part of this effort, LISA is building a database of resources, Lisapedia.
While all Lisapedia content will be carefully written, reviewed, and validate by a scientific and editorial committee, this page represents a technological proof of concept of combining structured knowledge from field experts with generative AI to draft content, which can then be reviewed and edited by experts.
THIS CONTENT IS DISPLAYED HERE FOR DEMONSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY. IT IS NOT INTENDED TO BE USED AS A REFERENCE. SOME CONTENT MAY BE IRRELEVANT, OR EVEN OUTRIGHT FALSE. IF YOU SUSPECT A MEDICAL CONDITION, IMMEDIATLY REFER TO A TRAINED PROFESSIONAL.
This is the generated guide:
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I am a 12th grade math teacher. I am looking for suggestions on how to support my student according to their strengths and needs. You are a child and adolescent psychiatrist. Your role is to provide guidance to a 12th grade math teacher on how to support student according to their strengths and needs. My student has been assessed for the following dimension: Self-Confidence - assessing one's belief in their ability: Confidence is an individual's belief in their own ability to take on and succeed at a task or challenge. <h3><slot data-nx-ref="value-0"></slot></h3> <slot data-nx-ref="value-0-desc"></slot> <h3><slot data-nx-ref="value-50"></slot></h3> <slot data-nx-ref="value-50-desc"></slot> <h3><slot data-nx-ref="value-100"></slot></h3> <slot data-nx-ref="value-100-desc"></slot> His/her profile is as follows: Appropriately and flexibly assesses own ability: Confidence, or self-confidence, is an adaptive behavior used to address the tasks and challenges of daily life. Confidence develops and expands with knowledge and experience, as individuals become aware of their own skills and abilities, giving them an appropriate perspective on what they can do and what they cannot. Being realistic about one's abilities leads to a proper balance between self-confidence and caution. Create a guide that I can use and share to best support my student. The guide MUST have the following structure: 1. Overview of the challenges associated with this profile Present this section as a markdown table with 2 columns: - Challenges, - How they manifest. 2. Efficient, evidence-based strategies to support this student In this section, include 3 to 5 strategies. Each strategy must have: - A title, - A brief description and why it is efficient, - Specific implementation steps, - Parameters to monitor and adjust. Present this information in a markdown table with 4 columns. Each strategy must be sustainable and easy to implement in the classroom, and lead to this student nurturing his strengths and building resilience. 3. Do and don'ts List common mistakes to avoid and best practices to follow when supporting this student. Present this information in a markdown table with 2 columns. 4. Further reading and research List resources that can help me learn more about this profile, as well as a choice of keywords to use in my own research. Be concise and use simple language. Prefer using bullet points and/or markdown tables instead of long text paragraphs.
Guide on Supporting Student's with a Self-Assessment Profile
1. Overview of the challenges associated with this profile
Challenges | How they Manifest |
---|---|
Overconfidence | The student might take on more tasks than they can handle, leading to stress, exhaustion, or incomplete assignments. |
Underestimation of tasks difficulty | The student may underestimate the difficulty of a task, which could result in poor performance or missing deadlines. |
Difficulty accepting feedback | Due to their confidence, the student may refuse to take constructive feedback, hampering learning process. |
2. Efficient, Evidence-based Strategies to support this student
Title | Description/Why Efficient | Implementation Steps | Parameters to Monitor and Adjust |
---|---|---|---|
Promote Realistic Goals Setting | Helps students set manageable and effective goals leading to the development of confidence | Elicit the goals from the student and work together to make them SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound) | Monitor achievability, relevance and pace of goal setting |
Foster Feedback Acceptance | Encourage students to accept and learn from feedback | Provide feedback in a gentle, constructive way, focusing on the task not the individual | Monitor student's response to feedback |
Encourage Self-reflection | Builds awareness of the strengths and improvement areas | Provide time for students after each assignment to reflect on what they did well and what they can modify | Keep track of the reflection process and its impact on self-assessment and confidence |
3. Do and Don'ts
Do's | Don'ts |
---|---|
Give both positive and negative feedback. | Don't inflate student's confidence with overpraise. |
Encourage the student to take on challenging tasks within reason. | Don't allow the student to take on too much and burn out. |
Teach the student how to set realistic and achievable goals. | Don't set goals for the student without their input. |
4. Further Reading and Research
- Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control by Albert Bandura
- Mindset: The New Psychology of Success by Carol S. Dweck
Keywords for research:
- Self-Confidence
- Self-Efficacy
- Self-Assessment
- Goal Setting
- Feedback Acceptance
- Self-reflection