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100+ Free CT Psych Juris Practice Questions

Pass your Connecticut Psychology Jurisprudence Examination exam on the first try — instant access, no signup required.

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2026 Statistics

Key Facts: CT Psych Juris Exam

70%

Passing Score

Board requirement

CGS Ch. 383

Practice Act

CT General Statutes

20h/yr

CE Requirement

Annual renewal

DPH

Regulatory Agency

Dept. of Public Health

12 hours

Child Abuse Report

CGS 17a-101b

The CT Psychology Jurisprudence Exam covers Connecticut's psychology practice act (CGS Chapter 383), DPH regulations, psychologist scope of practice, mandatory reporting to DCF (CGS 17a-101), elder abuse reporting (CGS 17b-451), duty to warn, psychologist-client privilege (CGS 52-146c), telehealth provisions, supervision requirements, 20h/year CE requirements, APA ethics under state law, and Board disciplinary procedures.

About the CT Psych Juris Exam

The Connecticut Psychology Jurisprudence Exam tests knowledge of the Connecticut psychology practice act (CGS Chapter 383, Sections 20-186 to 20-195) and DPH regulations governing psychology practice. Required for psychologist licensure in Connecticut, administered by the Board under the Department of Public Health.

Questions

Varies scored questions

Time Limit

Varies

Passing Score

70%

Exam Fee

Included with application (Connecticut Board of Examiners of Psychologists (DPH))

CT Psych Juris Exam Content Outline

30%

Connecticut Psychology Practice Act & DPH Rules

CGS Chapter 383 Sections 20-186 to 20-195, Board rules, DPH regulatory authority, definitions, unlicensed practice penalties

25%

Scope of Practice & Licensing

Psychologist scope of practice, doctoral requirements, 1,750 postdoctoral hours, EPPP, annual renewal, title protection

20%

Ethics & Professional Conduct

APA Ethics Code under state law, dual relationships, competency boundaries, cultural competence, advertising standards

15%

Confidentiality & Mandatory Reporting

Psychologist-client privilege (CGS 52-146c), duty to warn, child abuse reporting to DCF, elder abuse reporting, HIPAA

10%

Telehealth & Assessment Standards

Telehealth regulations, informed consent for telehealth, testing standards, forensic practice, record retention

How to Pass the CT Psych Juris Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: 70%
  • Exam length: Varies questions
  • Time limit: Varies
  • Exam fee: Included with application

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

CT Psych Juris Study Tips from Top Performers

1Study the Connecticut psychology practice act (CGS Chapter 383, Sections 20-186 to 20-195)
2Know the psychologist-client privilege statute (CGS 52-146c through 52-146j) and its exceptions
3Understand mandatory reporting timelines: 12-hour oral and 48-hour written report for child abuse to DCF
4Review the sexual misconduct statute (CGS 53a-73a) and its criminal implications for psychologists
5Study DPH regulatory authority and the Board's disciplinary sanctions including revocation, suspension, and probation

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a jurisprudence exam required for psychologist licensure in Connecticut?

Yes, Connecticut requires passage of a state jurisprudence examination covering the psychology practice act and Board regulations, in addition to the national EPPP, for psychologist licensure.

What laws does the Connecticut psychology jurisprudence exam cover?

The exam covers CGS Chapter 383 (psychology practice act), psychologist-client privilege (CGS 52-146c to 52-146j), mandatory reporting statutes (CGS 17a-101 for child abuse, CGS 17b-451 for elder abuse), and DPH regulations.

How many CE hours do Connecticut psychologists need each year?

Connecticut psychologists must complete 20 hours of continuing education per year, including specific ethics and professional responsibility content.

What are the mandatory reporting requirements for Connecticut psychologists?

Connecticut psychologists must report suspected child abuse to DCF within 12 hours orally and 48 hours in writing (CGS 17a-101b), and suspected elder abuse to the Commissioner of Social Services.