School psychologist has roots in art
Whitefish school psychologist Robin
Bissell began her career in art education.
As a teacher in Alaska, she enjoyed
seeing students express themselves through art, but she soon
discovered a curiosity about some of her most talented
students.
“I had a curiosity about seeing kids
struggle,” she said. “I couldn’t understand why some students could
have so much skill and talent and not pass high school.”
That early curiosity prompted Bissell
to return to college and begin a career in school psychology. She’s
now in her seventh year with Whitefish schools.
The Montana Association of School
Psychologists recently named Bissell the Montana School
Psychologist of the Year Award. She officially accepts the award
next month.
Dave Means, special services director
for the district, nominated Bissell.
He said it was her work with the
Student Assistance Program, an intervention program that provides
support groups for students, last year that prompted him to
nominate her. Bissell was part of a group of administrators that
launched the program and served as its coordinator.
“She’s done some outstanding things,”
he said. “Implementing the district-wide initiative was one of
them. She recognizes a need to support those kids who are
struggling. She facilitated SAP while doing all of her other
duties.”
School psychologists perform diagnostic
tests on students and provide special education support, but they
also work with students’ social and emotional needs with the goal
of improving their education.
“Unless you create a learning
environment that feels safe, they won’t learn,” Bissell said of
students.
She said she enjoys helping students
through everyday issues so they can learn.
“I trust that everyone has the
potential to evolve and change — to work through difficult
situations,” she said. “I like to set up a space where they have
the opportunity to see that in themselves.”
Turning to school psychology was a
second career of sorts for Bissell.
While serving as an art teacher she
began taking counseling credits and eventually enrolled in a
psychology course through the University of Montana. She worked in
Bigfork for about 15 years working in both art and psychology
before moving to Whitefish.
“I always considered myself an artist,”
she said. “I never would have considered psychology, but art and
counseling overlap a lot.”
Bissell, who primarily works with
fifth- to 12th-graders, talks to students about their issues, but
she often has to be creative to get them to open up.
“With middle and high school students,
asking how they feel doesn’t always work,” she said. “Sometimes we
play games or I pull out the art supplies and ask them to draw
themselves or their family.”
When Bissell returned to college she
thought about shifting to art therapy, but chose to continue
working with children.
“I was so attached to the school and I
wanted to stay working with the kids,” she said.
“Kids are at such a wonderful place
where they want to learn. They aren’t stuck in a rut like adults
can be.”