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.

I want to help my children/student in the following broad area:
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I want to help my children/student in the following, more specific area:
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In this area, my children/student displays the following behavior:
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I am:
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This is the generated guide:

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I am a 2nd grade 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 2nd grade teacher on how to support student according to their strengths and needs.

My student has been assessed for the following dimension:

Planning and Organization - developing plans to complete tasks: Planning and organization, often referred to as "executive functions," make it possible to allocate cognitive and other resources to successfully sequence and complete tasks. Planning and organization are learned skills that require the appropriate application of attention, cognitive ability, and memory in order to create and sustain a plan. This includes both short-term and long-term planning for projects, assignments, and other activities. It also includes the monitoring of these processes and plans in order to assure progress toward the desired goal. While younger children have difficulty with executive functions due to a limited concept of time, with maturity, it is possible to manage more and multiple complex tasks, with intermixed goals and objectives.
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His/her profile is as follows:

Adaptive, flexible planning: Individuals apply developmentally and contextually appropriate strategies to plan, organize, manage, and complete tasks, goals, and obligations, with the capacity to flexibly alter plans to meet changing environments and demands.

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.
  1. Overview of the Challenges Associated with this Profile
ChallengesHow They Manifest
Over-planningThe student might spend too much time on planning and not enough on the task itself.
Adapting to new situationsMight have a hard time switching tasks or altering plans when necessary, may struggle with unexpected changes.
Balancing tasksThe student might focus too strongly on one task or part of a task, struggling to manage multiple tasks.
  1. Evidence-based Strategies to Support this Student
TitleDescription and Why it's EfficientImplementation StepsParameters
ChunkingBreaking down tasks into manageable pieces can make planning easier and reduce overwhelmBreak complex tasks into smaller steps when assigning them. Use visuals to highlight each step.Monitor task completion and adjust the size of the "chunks" based on observation.
Visual SchedulesGives student a visual grasp of time and tasks.Create a visual timetable of daily tasks and activities. Include the student in creating this.Make adjustments as necessary, keep track of activities that student struggles with.
Teaching FlexibilityTeaching flexible thinking can help the student adapt to changes.Model and reinforce flexible thinking through role-plays or discussing examples.Keep an eye on how well the student adapts to changes in their plans or disruptions.
  1. Do's and Don'ts
Do'sDon'ts
Encourage the student to take part in changeable tasks like puzzle solving.Don't overwhelm the student with multiple new tasks at once.
Be patient and provide support when student gets stuck.Don't heavily penalise the student for an inability to adapt quickly.
Consistently provide clear, explicit instructions.Don't expect the student to instinctively know how to change plans or tasks.
  1. Further Reading and Research
  • Understood.org's article on Improving Executive Functions
  • "Smart But Scattered" by Peg Dawson and Richard Guare
  • "Flexibly Adaptive Responses to Adversity: Self-Regulatory, Psychological, and Biological Aspects" in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Keywords: Executive functions, flexible thinking, adaptive planning.

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