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 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:

Responsibility for self and others - accepting responsibility for actions taken by self or others: Responsibility is the willingness and ability to appropriately manage or control self, situations and/or the actions of other individuals.
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His/her profile is as follows:

Refuses or is unable to take any responsibility: Some individuals are unwilling or unable to manage themselves or others. They appear helpless and ineffectual, and can become victims of circumstances that they fail to control.

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
Lack of internal motivationThe student displays a passive temperament and does not show interest in managing tasks on their own; typically awaits instructions.
Failure to recognize the consequences of actionsThe student finds it hard to understand how their actions have an impact on the overall situation or other people.
Avoidance of responsibilityThe student consistently pushes tasks on to others or denies having a role in negative outcomes, leading to task dodging.
Low self-efficacyThe student feels helpless in problem-solving situations, leading to lower self-confidence and a proclivity to not actively participate in activities.
  1. Efficient, evidence-based strategies to support this student
TitleDescription and EfficiencyImplementation StepsParameters to Monitor and Adjust
Building Self-EfficacyIntroduce tasks that the student can successfully complete to build their self-confidence and encourage them to take more responsibility.Start with simple tasks, provide constructive feedback and positive reinforcement when they successfully complete tasks. Gradually increase the complexity.Monitor their confidence level and participation rate in class activities. Adjust complexity of tasks based on their performance.
Role ModelingAct as a responsible model that can motivate the student to imitate and learn.Share stories about how you take responsibility, deal with consequences, and resolve incidents in your life.Note any behavioral changes in the student. Modify your role-playing scenarios to match student's readiness level.
Foster a Growth MindsetHelp the student embrace challenges and see failure as a learning opportunity, not as a personal indictment.Discuss successful people who faced failure and how they overcame it. Emphasize that effort and persistence lead to improvement.Track student's attitude towards failure and challenges. Monitor their responses and modify your teaching methods accordingly.
Consequence UnderstandingHelp the student understand the impact of their actions.Make use of real-life situations or stories to help them understand the results of specific actions.Observe if the student begins to acknowledge mistakes and learn from them. Use different situations or methods if the current ones are ineffective.
  1. Do's and Don'ts
Do'sDon'ts
Encourage open communication; ask how they feel about tasks or situations.Don't assume the student will not take responsibility; they need your support and guidance.
Provide constructive feedback on their effort, not just the outcome.Don't blame the student for mistakes; instead, focus on how to improve.
Help them set realistic goals to build confidence.Don't set unachievably high expectations which can discourage them.
  1. Further reading and research

Keywords for further research: Self-Efficacy, Growth Mindset, Consequence Understanding, Role Modeling, Responsibility Avoidance.

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